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<title>Adaptive substance, creative regeneration: Mainstream science, repression, and creativity</title> | |||
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Adaptive substance, creative regeneration: Mainstream science, repression, and creativity | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"I intend to show you how neo-Darwinism has been invalidated within science itself, as an | |||
explanation of how life on earth has evolved and is evolving. It is nevertheless still perpetrated by | |||
the academic establishment, if only because it serves so well to promote genetic engineering, a | |||
technology that has the potential to destroy all life on earth. Furthermore, neo-Darwinism reinforces a | |||
worldview that undermines all moral values and prevents us from the necessary shift to holistic, | |||
ecological sciences that can truly regenerate the earth and revitalize the human spirit." | |||
</strong> | |||
Mae-Wan Ho | |||
<a href="http://www.i-sis.org.uk/paris.php" target="_blank">http://www.i-sis.org.uk/paris.php</a> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
More than 50 years have been wasted in one of the most important and fundamental branches of science and | |||
medicine, for reasons that are highly ideological and political. Rather than studying the regeneration of | |||
organs and tissues, and recognizing its obvious importance in healing as well as in understanding the nature | |||
of life, much of the last century was devoted to the defamation of the researchers who were making real | |||
process in the field. Despite many demonstrations that regeneration can occur in adult mammals, students | |||
were taught that it happens only in lower vertebrates. I think it's important to look closely at the | |||
ideology responsible for this great loss. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Warburg and Szent-Gyorgyi, in thinking about cancer, emphasized that growth is the primordial function of | |||
all cells, and that the differentiated functions of complex organisms involve restraints of that primitive | |||
function, imposed by a system that has developed through time. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Seen with this orientation, regeneration is the spontaneous result of the disappearance of restraint. The | |||
reproduction of a whole plant from a twig, or clone, was a process known for thousands of years. Any part of | |||
the plant contains the information needed for making a whole plant. More than thirty years ago, cells from a | |||
tumor were added to the cells of a normal embryo, and the animal that matured from the embryo-tumor mix was | |||
normal, and had traits of both lineages, showing that the tumor cells had retained the genetic information | |||
of a complete healthy organism, and just needed a different environment in which to realize their full | |||
potential. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the currents of medical thinking, from classical times through Paracelsus to homeopathy and | |||
naturopathy, has been a confidence in the capacity of the organism to heal itself. But "modern" medicine has | |||
arrogated to itself the "healing power," with terrible results, mitigated only by their occasional reluctant | |||
acceptance of fragments of sane organismic thinking, such as recognizing the importance of nutrition, or of | |||
keeping sewage out of the drinking water. Research into methods to support the organism's natural | |||
restorative powers has been ridiculed and suppressed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
We are immersed in the propaganda of modern medicine, and part of that propaganda involves the confabulation | |||
of a history of science that supports their practice and their ideology. The real history of science won't | |||
be found in science textbooks. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"I intend to show you how neo-Darwinism has been invalidated within science itself, as an explanation of how | |||
life on earth has evolved and is evolving. It is nevertheless still perpetrated by the academic | |||
establishment, if only because it serves so well to promote genetic engineering, a technology that has the | |||
potential to destroy all life on earth. Furthermore, neo-Darwinism reinforces a worldview that undermines | |||
all moral values and prevents us from the necessary shift to holistic, ecological sciences that can truly | |||
regenerate the earth and revitalize the human spirit." Mae-Wan Ho | |||
<a href="http://www.i-sis.org.uk/paris.php" target="_blank">http://www.i-sis.org.uk/paris.php</a> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mainstream medical treatments are based on some fundamentally absurd scientific ideas. The advent of | |||
experimental animal cloning and the industrialization of genetic engineering have undercut the most | |||
important biological doctrines of the 20th century, but the processes of critical thinking haven't made | |||
headway against most of the traditional medical stereotypes. Cloning shows that all cells are potential | |||
"stem cells," but this fact co-exists with the Hayflick doctrine, that says, essentially, that no cell is a | |||
stem cell. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The ideology of culturally significant "intellectuals"--scientists, professors, neurobiologists, linguists, | |||
philosophers, oncologists, geneticists--in the US is deeply influenced by the dualism and mechanistic | |||
materialism of Rene DesCartes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The denial that animals can think or understand language, the claim that babies or animals don't feel pain, | |||
or that heart cells and brain cells can't divide, or that somatic cells lack the genetic capacity to be | |||
cloned, or that they are intrinsically mortal, limited to a maximum of 50 cell divisions--these absurdities | |||
of 20th century biology and medicine all resulted from an abject commitment to the mechanistic doctrine of | |||
matter and life promoted or invented by DesCartes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
I doubt that DesCartes really invented anything, because, by the evidence of his writing, he wasn't an | |||
intelligent man, but he placed himself politically in such a way that his arguments were acceptable to many | |||
influential people, and they continue to be acceptable to authoritarian and elitist factions even today. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 16th and 17th century the cultures of England, Holland, and France were increasingly dominated by | |||
business interests. People who had money to invest wanted to see the world as an orderly, predictable place, | |||
and they found that many of the ideas of the ancient Greeks were useful. Mathematics was needed to calculate | |||
interest rates, insurance premiums, and, for the military, the trajectories of missiles. In an orderly | |||
world, allowance for a little random variation helped to save the perfection of the general rule. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In this environment, theological thinking began retrenching its doctrine, to make it more acceptable to the | |||
increasingly powerful commercial people. The clockwork universe of DesCartes' time, in which a perfect world | |||
that operated according to perfect natural laws had been divinely created, gradually became theologically | |||
acceptable during the 18th and 19th centuries. In the 18th century, the Deists were the most famous | |||
embodiment of the idea, and then in the 19th century their place was taken by the Catastrophists, who | |||
claimed that the fossils which seemed to show evolutionary change of species actually represented species | |||
that had been created along with those now existing, but that had been destroyed by catastrophes, such as | |||
Noah's flood. By the end of the 19th century, the president of an American university recognized that | |||
theological compromises could prevent his undergraduates from rejecting religion entirely, and forbade | |||
sermons against evolution. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There were many biologists who insisted that evolution of new species was analogous to the development of an | |||
individual, and that both revealed an adaptive capacity of the living substance. In this view, the adaptive | |||
growth of an individual in a new environment revealed novel solutions to new problems, and showed an innate | |||
inventiveness and intelligence in the process of growth and adaptation. The appearance of new species was | |||
thought to represent the same sorts of adaptive processes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Erasmus Darwin (grandfather of Charles) was an evolutionist of this sort, but because of political and | |||
theological pressure, he kept relatively quiet about his beliefs. There was an underground culture, in which | |||
an evolutionary view of the world was accepted, but these views were seldom published, because of | |||
increasingly stringent censorship. Because of censorship, poetry, letters, and diaries, rather than academic | |||
and scholarly works, give us the true picture of 18th century and early 19th century scientific culture. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The scientists who wanted their work to be acceptable to those in power found ways to work with the | |||
Cartesian mechanical view of the world, building on the Deists' compromise, which had succeeded in removing | |||
the supernatural from nature. As the fossil evidence of evolution became inescapable, around the time of | |||
Charles Darwin's work, those who wanted to bring evolution into the mainstream of culture found that the | |||
Catastrophism of the creationists could be adapted to their purposes, with only slight modification. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The doctrine of Thomas Malthus, who argued that war, famine, and disease were beneficial for those who | |||
survived, by decreasing the competition for limited resources, became a near equivalent to the catastrophic | |||
floods that the creationists had invoked to explain the geological record that contained evidence of many | |||
extinct animals. <strong>The doctrine of Malthus, like that of the Catastrophists, made loss, deletion, and | |||
destruction into a central device for explaining the history of the world.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Both of the Darwins had accepted the idea that many biological changes were adaptive, rather than random, | |||
but the new practical compromise doctrine introduced the idea that changes were just "random variations." | |||
The essentially mechanical nature of the world was preserved, because "chance" occurrences could be dealt | |||
with, and didn't involve anything supernatural. <strong>The function of the environment wasn't to add | |||
anything to life (that would have been to assert that there were creative powers other than those of the | |||
Creator), but simply to eliminate the inferior individuals that appeared as the result of random | |||
changes.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Gregor Mendel applied the principle of chance to explaining the inheritance of certain traits, and showed | |||
that "traits" were passed on unchanged, even when they weren't visible. His ideas were published and were | |||
acceptable to the scientific mainstream of his time. Traits were determined by "factors" that were passed | |||
on, unchanged, from parents, and biological variation was explained by varied mixing of factors which in | |||
themselves were unaffected by the organism or the environment. Genetic determinism was safely compatible | |||
with creationism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Shortly after Mendel's death, August Weismann began a campaign to put a stop to the claims of those who, | |||
like the Darwins and Lamarck, saw adaptive development of organisms as an essential part of the evolution of | |||
species. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Weismann was essentially a propagandist, and his first fame was the result of "disproving" Lamarck by | |||
cutting the tails off more than 1500 mice, and observing that their offspring were born with tails. The | |||
reason the inheritance of acquired traits was impossible, he said, was that the "germ line" was perfectly | |||
isolated from the rest of the organism. The differentiated tissues of the body were produced by the | |||
selective loss of information from the nuclei of cells in the embryo. The cells of the germ line were | |||
immortal and contained all the information needed to produce an organism, but no other cell of the organism | |||
was complete. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Complexity was produced by deletion, and this was the basis for arguing that, if even the development of an | |||
individual was nothing but a passive unfolding of inherited properties, much like unpacking a trunkful of | |||
clothes, then there could be no adaptively acquired traits, and certainly no inheritance of something which | |||
didn't exist. Changes in an individual were simply accidents, such as having a tail amputated, and so the | |||
whole issue of the origin of complexity was safely left to a primordial creation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Weismann and his arguments were famous in Europe and the US, and formed the background for the ideas known | |||
as neo-Darwinism. His "isolation of the germ line" was the earliest version of the Central Dogma of | |||
molecular biology, namely, that information flows only from DNA to RNA to protein. His doctrine, of | |||
complexification through deletion, is the epitome of the greatest dogma of modern times, expressed in | |||
doctrines from Catastrophism through the second law of thermodynamics and the theory of the Big Bang, down | |||
to Hayflick's Doctrine of the mortality of somatic cells. All these are consequences of the Cartesian and | |||
Deistic separation of intelligence from matter. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Regeneration is one of the most vivid examples of the intelligence of living substance. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Given a natural tendency of cells to multiply, the interesting thing about regenerative healing is the | |||
question of why the new growth of tissue sometimes differentiates to fit appropriately into its | |||
surroundings, but sometimes fails to differentiate, becoming a tumor. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
With aging, the regenerative process declines, and the process of tissue rebuilding slows. Against a | |||
background of reduced regenerative ability, tissue growth sometimes produces tumors, rather than renewed | |||
healthy tissue. When tumors are grafted onto the amputated tail stump of a salamander, which has good | |||
regenerative ability, the tumor is transformed into a tail, by its envirornment, or morphogenic field. The | |||
"cancer problem" is essentially the problem of understanding the organizing forces of the organism. The | |||
aging problem is another aspect of the same problem. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Traditionally, biologists had studied anatomy, physiology, embryology or development, and taxonomy or the | |||
classification of organisms. The growth of knowedge early in the 20th century was suddenly seeming to | |||
confirm the physiological, adaptive view of organisms that Lamarck had held. C.M. Child, Joseph Needham, | |||
Alexander Gurwitsch, and L.V. Polezhaev were demonstrating the primacy of a formative process in biology. | |||
Polezhaev and Vladimir Filatov were studying practical means of stimulating regeneration as a medical | |||
technique. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Until the beginning of the second world war, the study of regeneration and the pattern-forming processes in | |||
embryology were the liveliest parts of biological research. Gestalt psychology was being developed at the | |||
same time, with a similar emphasis on patterns and wholes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But Weismannism and neo-Darwinism, largely embodied in the person of the geneticist T.H. Morgan, | |||
deliberately set out to kill that line of biological research. Gestalt psychology was similarly eliminated | |||
by the Behaviorists. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of Morgan's closest associates, his student and colleague A.H. Sturtevant, said that "Morgan's | |||
objectives, what he was trying to get at in general in his biological work was to produce mechanistic | |||
interpretations of biological phenomena. One of the things that irritated him most was any suggestion of | |||
purpose in biological interpretation. He always had some reservations about the idea of natural selection, | |||
because it seemed to him to open the door to interpretations of biological phenomena in terms of purpose. He | |||
could be talked into the conclusion that there was nothing that wasn't strictly mechanistic about this | |||
interpretation, but he never liked it. And you had to talk him into it again every few months." (Sturtevant, | |||
A. H., <em>Genetics, Vol. 159,</em> 1-5, September 2001, Copyright 2001, Reminiscences of T. H. Morgan.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Whatever his motives, Morgan was known to have prevented his students (including C.M. Child) from publishing | |||
work that supported a holistic view of the organism. After Morgan's death, there was an intense and | |||
widespread campaign to suppress any approach to biology other than the "new synthesis," neo-Darwinism, with | |||
its doctrine of mechanistic genetic determinism and its doctrine of random variation. A developmental | |||
biologist, J.M. Opitz (1985), commented that <strong>"in one of the most astounding developments in Western | |||
scientific history, the gradient-field, or epimorphic field concept, as embodied in normal ontogeny and | |||
as studied by experimental embryologists, seems to have simply vanished from the intellectual patrimony | |||
of Western biologists."</strong> | |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Formative processes are necessarily multidimensional, and that makes calculation and analysis very complex. | |||
To a great extent, the geneticists were motivated to study bacterial genes, rather than vertebrate embryos, | |||
by the principle that motivated the drunk to look for his car keys under the street lamp, even though that | |||
wasn't where he lost them, because the light made it easier to look there. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bacteria are easy to study because they lack the complexity that makes it hard to study an embryo or an | |||
animal. The language used in genetics textbooks shows not only that bacteria are treated by geneticists as | |||
if they were one or two dimensional, but that the concepts developed for bacterial genetics have been | |||
extrapolated to use in describing complex organisms: "<strong>Genes interact</strong> to establish the body | |||
axis in Drosophila. Homeotic <strong>Genes control</strong> pattern formation along the anterior-posterior | |||
body axis." (<em>Essentials of Genetics,</em> M. Cummings and W. Klug, Prentice Hall, 2004.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the basic distinctions in embryology is in the way the cells divide after the egg is fertilized. | |||
Oysters and earthworms have spiral cleavage, sea urchins and people have radial cleavage. Several decades | |||
ago an experimenter was transferring a nucleus from an egg of an animal with radial cleavage, I think a sea | |||
urchin, into the enucleated egg of a snail, with spiral cleavage. The nucleus transplanted across such a | |||
great difference in phyla didn't sustain maturation of the animal, but it did permit development to proceed | |||
for several rounds of cell division, and the pattern of cell division, or cleavage, and embryonic | |||
development always followed the pattern of the phylum to which the egg cytoplasm belonged, never the pattern | |||
of the phylum from which the nucleus was derived. The genes in the nucleus, obviously, weren't directing the | |||
basic pattern formation of the embryo. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One-dimensional bacterial genetics can be used to "explain" multidimensional systems, but it can't be | |||
expected to make useful predictions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The idea of complexity, or of multidimensionality, has often been analyzed in terms of "fields," by analogy | |||
with a magnetic field, as some property, or properties, that extend beyond any individual part, giving some | |||
coherence to the parts. Lamarck was concerned with understanding ensembles of particles and cells, but in | |||
his time electricity and heat were the only principles that physics provided that helped to illuminate the | |||
nature of living organisms. At the end of the 19th century, though, the physicist J.C. Bose was noticing | |||
that all of the properties of life that had interested Lamarck and Buffon--irritability, sensation, | |||
contraction, memory, etc.--had their close analogs in non-living substances. Bose, who invented the radio | |||
detector that was the core of Marconi's apparatus, found that, in the presence of an electromagnetic field, | |||
particles of a substance, such as finely powdered metal filings, cohered into a unified whole. An otherwise | |||
invisible, undetectable "field" which in Lamarck's time might have been known as one of the "subtle fluids," | |||
was able to organize a myriad of inert particles into a unified whole. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the early 1920s, Bungenberg de Jong and A.I. Oparin showed how solutions of organic substances could | |||
spontaneously organize themselves into complex systems, with differentiated parts. A Russian embryologist, | |||
Alexander Gurwitsch, found that the parts of an organ or embryo could exert their stimulating or organizing | |||
influence on other cells even through a piece of glass, and by using different types of filter, he | |||
identified ultraweak ultraviolet rays as a medium of communication between cells. F.-A. Popp and others are | |||
currently studying the integrating functions of ultraweak light signals. Guenter Albrecht-Buehler (who has | |||
an interesting website called Cell Intelligence) is investigating the role of pulsed infrared signals in | |||
cell communication. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Electrical fields produced by cells, tissues, and organisms have been shown to influence cellular metabolism | |||
and physiology, and to influence growth patterns. Closely associated with cellular electrical fields are | |||
fields or gradients of pH and osmolarity, and all of these fields are known to affect the activity of | |||
enzymes, and so to create environments or fields of particular chemical concentrations. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A phenomenon that was well known in the 1930s, when developmental fields were still a familiar part of | |||
scientific discussion, was the "cancer field." Before a cancer developed in a particular area, the area | |||
showed progessive changes, away from normal function and structure, toward the cancer physiology. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the embryonic state, damaged tissues regenerate quickly. The metabolism of an embryo or fetus is highly | |||
oxidative, converting glucose rapidly to carbon dioxide and water. Both carbon dioxide and water are | |||
important regulators of cellular metabolism and function, and the concentrations of both of them decrease | |||
systematically with maturity and aging. Both are involved with the most basic aspects of cellular | |||
sensitivity, responsiveness, and organization. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
To resume the scientific tradition that has "simply vanished," I think we have to recover our ability to | |||
think about organisms generally, leaving aside as many of the concepts of genetics as possible (such as | |||
"gene," "operon," "receptor"; "the gene" has never been more than an ideological artifact), because they so | |||
often falsify the most important issues. The organization of tissues and organs, and their functional | |||
properties, should be the focus of attention, as they were for Lamarck around 1800, and for Johanes Muller, | |||
who in 1840 saw cancer as a problem on the level of tissue, rather than cells. For Lamarck, sensitivity and | |||
movement were the essential properties of the living substance, and J. C. Bose showed reasons for believing | |||
that the characteristics of life were built on related properties of matter itself. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sensitivity, the ability to respond appropriately to the environment, is probably a missing factor in the | |||
development of a tumor. The ability to become quiescent, to quietly participate in the ensemble of cells, is | |||
an essential feature of the sensitivity and responsiveness of the cells of complex organisms. The factors | |||
that support organized appropriate functioning are the factors that help cells to inhibit the excitatory | |||
state. If the keys of an accordion or organ didn't spring back after the musician pressed them, the | |||
instrument would be unplayable. In extreme physiological states, such as epilepsy or malignant hyperthermia, | |||
nerves or muscles become incapable of relaxing. Insomnia and muscle cramps are milder degrees of a defective | |||
relaxation process. Excitoxicity and inflammation describe less generalized cases of a similar process, in | |||
which there is an imbalance between excitation and the restorative ability to stop the excitation. Prolonged | |||
excitation, resulting in excessive fatigue, can cause a cell to disintegrate, in the process of cell death | |||
called apoptosis, "falling away." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the experiments of Polezhaev and Filatov, the products of cell disintegration were found to stimulate the | |||
birth of new cells (possibly by blocking a signal that restrains cell division). This process has been found | |||
in every organ that has been examined appropriately. It amounts to a "streaming regeneration" of the | |||
organism, analogous to the progressive creation of Lamarck's view. G. Zajicek has demonstrated an orderly | |||
"streaming" renewal in several organs, and even the oocytes (which in the Weismannian dogma were formed at a | |||
very early stage during embryonic development, and were perfectly isolated from the cells of the mature | |||
body) have recently been shown to be continually regenerated in adult ovaries. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Stem" cells turn out to be ubiquitous, and the failure of regeneration and restoration seems to be | |||
situational. In the 1950s a magazine article described the regeneration of a finger-tip when the wound was | |||
kept enclosed. Decades later, friends (one a child, the other a man in his forties) had accidental | |||
amputations of a finger-tip, down to the cuticle so that no visible nail remained. The boy's mother fitted | |||
his finger with the tube from a ballpoint pen, and the man used an aluminum cigar tube as his "bandage." | |||
Within a few weeks, their fingers had regenerated to their normal shape and length. I think the closed | |||
environment allows the healing tissues to be exposed to a high concentration of carbon dioxide, in | |||
equilibrium with the carbon dioxide in the capillaries, and to a humid atmosphere, regulated by the osmotic | |||
or vapor pressure of the living tissues. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Under ordinary conditions, the creation of cells and the dissolution of cells should be exactly balanced. | |||
The coordination of these processes requires a high degree of coherence in the organism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Simple increase of water in the vicinity of a cell increases its tendency to multiply, as well as its | |||
excitability, and hypertonicity restrains cell division, and reduces excitability. Carbon dioxide, besides | |||
helping proteins to release water, appears to increase the ability of proteins and cells to respond to | |||
morphogenetic fields. Carbon dioxide is the most universal agent of relaxation, restoration, and | |||
preservation of the ability of cells to respond to signals. Progesterone is another very general agent of | |||
restorative inhibition. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The study of regeneration and "stem cells" is helping to illuminate the general process of aging, and to | |||
provide very practical solutions for specific degenerative diseases, as well as providing a context for more | |||
appropriate treatment of traumatic tissue injury. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In aging, the growth and regenerative processes are slowed. There is some evidence that even cell death is | |||
slower in old age, at least in some tissues. Since animals with the highest metabolic rate live the longest, | |||
the slowing rate of metabolism during aging probably accounts for those changes in the rate of cell renewal. | |||
The continually streaming regeneration of tissues is part of the adaptive process, and it is probably | |||
intensified by stress. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The ability to sleep deeply decreases in old age, as a generalized inflammatory, excitatory state of stress | |||
develops. With progressive weakening of restorative cellular relaxation (inhibition), cells become more | |||
susceptible to disintegration. It's well established that bone loss occurs almost entirely during the night, | |||
and since the catabolic hormones generally affect soft tissues as well as bones, the atrophy of soft tissues | |||
("sarcopenia") of aging is also probably a process that occurs mostly during the night. Mediators of | |||
inflammation are at their highest during the night (Cutolo and Masi, 2005). But during the period of growth, | |||
the length of bones seems to increase mostly during the night (Noonan, et al., 2004). My interpretation of | |||
this is that the stress of darkness accelerates biological processes, whether the process is mainly | |||
constructive or mainly destructive. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The effect of light supports efficient oxidative energy production, which supports the protective inhibitory | |||
processes, by increasing ATP and CO2, and decreases the inflammatory mediators that intensify stress. If | |||
organized cellular luminescence is required for a proper balance, then the random luminescence produced by | |||
lipid peroxidation (which may be more intense at night--Diaz-Munoz, et al., 1985), might be an important | |||
factor in disrupting the balanced streaming of regeneration. Free radicals, whatever their source, absorb a | |||
broad spectrum of radiation, and would block luminous signals of all frequencies. Isoprene, produced mainly | |||
at night (Cailleux and Allain, 1989), is another ultraviolet absorber that might account for nocturnal | |||
regulatory disorders. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The age pigment, lipofuscin, is known to contribute to degenerative diseases, but the nature of its toxicity | |||
has never been established. Its absorptive and fluorescent properties would be very likely to interfere with | |||
mitogenetic and morphogenetic radiation. Polyunsaturated fats are the main component of lipofuscin, and | |||
these fats in themselves can absorb ultraviolet light. When those fats are present in the skin, exposure to | |||
ultraviolet light accelerates the aging of the skin. Free fatty acids often increase during the night, under | |||
the influence of hormones such as adrenaline and growth hormone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A single night of poor sleep probably causes significant anatomical damage to the streaming cellular systems | |||
that will be repaired over the next few days if a high level of energy metabolism can be combined with a | |||
sufficient amount of deep sleep. The things that optimize energy and sleep form the background for | |||
supporting the restorative processes. Salt, glycine, carbon dioxide, progesterone, thyroid hormone and sugar | |||
all contribute to preserving the organism's energetic reserves by reducing inappropriate excitation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lamarck's idea that organs developed or regressed according to their use or disuse was often attacked by | |||
followers of the Weismann-Morgan genetic dogma. In their view, the influence of the environment was limited | |||
to either preventing or permitting the realization of "the genetic potential." Once that predefined | |||
potential had been unfolded, the finite and mortal nature of the somatic cells didn't allow for any | |||
significant changes, except for depletion and death. One of the high points of Weismannian biology came with | |||
the publication of an article in Science, around 1970, that proposed to explain learning in terms of the | |||
lifelong loss of brain cells, beginning in humans around the age of 18 months, with a daily loss of 100,000 | |||
cells, which would record experience by selective deletion, the way punching holes in cards had been used to | |||
enter data into computers. I was present to witness "world class biologists" taking that idea very | |||
seriously. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As Sturtevant mentioned in the quotation above, T.H. Morgan couldn't accept any attribution of | |||
purposefulness to organisms. In his genetic dogma, changes were only random, and people who denied that were | |||
denounced as "teleological" (or metaphysical) thinkers. Changes occurred by deletion, not by meaningful | |||
addition. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of Pavlov's students, P.K. Anokhin, developed the concept of the Functional System in the 1930s, to | |||
explain the purposive behavior of animals. In the 1950s, Anokhin integrated the endocrinology of stress and | |||
adaptation into the concept, and F.Z. Meerson continued the work, concentrating on the metabolic and | |||
structural changes that protect the heart during stress. The simplest view of the conditional reflex | |||
involves the adaptation of an animal to an external signal, identifying it as the occasion for a particular | |||
action. Analyzing the Functional System starts with the need of the animal, for example for food, and | |||
examines the processes that are involved in satisfying that need, including nerve cells, a sense of hunger, | |||
knowledge of what things are edible, the muscles needed to get the food, and the digestive apparatus for | |||
assimilating it. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When an understanding of stress physiology is combined with the idea of functional systems, the adaptive | |||
meaning of the use or disuse of certain organs is given a concrete basis. Cortisol mobilizes amino acids | |||
from muscles that are idle, and makes them available for the synthesis of proteins in the muscles, nerves, | |||
or glands that are activated in adapting to the stress. The London taxi drivers whose hippocampus grows as | |||
they learn the locations of the streets are very good examples of the processes described by Meerson, | |||
Anokhin, and Lamarck, in which the use of an organ in meeting a need contributes to the development of that | |||
organ. The balance between growth and regression is shifted during adaptive behavior. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Exercise physiologists, without mentioning functional systems, have recently discovered some principles that | |||
extend the discoveries of Meerson and Anokhin. They found that "concentric" contraction, that is, causing | |||
the muscle to contract against resistance, improves the muscle's function, without injuring it. (Walking up | |||
a mountain causes concentric contractions to dominate in the leg muscles. Walking down the mountain injures | |||
the muscles, by stretching them, forcing them to elongate while bearing a load; they call that eccentric | |||
contraction.) Old people, who had extensively damaged mitochondrial DNA, were given a program of concentric | |||
exercise, and as their muscles adapted to the new activity, their mitochondrial DNA was found to have become | |||
normal. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are probably the equivalents of constructive "concentric" activity and destructively stressful | |||
"eccentric" activity in the brain. For example, "rote learning" is analogous to eccentric muscle | |||
contraction, and learning by asking questions is "concentric." "No bird soars too high, if he soars with his | |||
own wings." Any activity that seems "programmed" probably stifles cellular energy and cellular intelligence. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When activity is meaningful, and is seen to be meeting a felt need, the catabolic and anabolic systems | |||
support and strengthen the components of the functional system that has been activated. Everything we do has | |||
an influence on the streaming renewal of the adaptive living substance. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are many therapeutic techniques that could be improved by organized research, for example, | |||
investigating the interactions of increasing carbon dioxide, reducing atmospheric pressure, supplementing | |||
combinations of salt and other minerals, balancing amino acids and sugars, and varying light exposure and | |||
types of activity. The dramatic results that have occasionally been demonstrated (and then suppressed and | |||
forgotten) are just a hint of the possibilities. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If we keep our thoughts on the living substance, the pervasive ideologies lose their oppressive power. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Chronobiol Int. 2004;21(6):937-47. <strong>Postprandial metabolic profiles following meals and snacks eaten | |||
during simulated night and day shift work.</strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Anokhin P.K. <strong><em>System mechanisms of higher nervous activity.</em></strong> | |||
Moscow, Nauka, 1979. (In Russian). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Life Sci. 1989;44(24):1877-80. <strong>Isoprene and sleep.</strong> Cailleux A, Allain P. Isoprene is one of | |||
the main constituents of endogenous origin in exhaled human breath. The concentration of isoprene seems to | |||
vary with states of sleep and wakefulness, <strong>increasing during sleep and decreasing sharply just after | |||
awakening.</strong> Thus, isoprene may be involved in in sleep upholding. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Exp Neurol. 1978 May 15;60(1):41-55. Evidence of normal mitosis with complete cytokinesis in central nervous | |||
system neurons during sustained depolarization with ouabain. Cone CD Jr, Cone CM. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nat New Biol. 1973 Nov 28;246(152):110-1. Stimulation of DNA synthesis in CNS neurones by sustained | |||
depolarisation. Stillwell EF, Cone CM, Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Natl Cancer Inst. 1971 Mar;46(3):655-63. Intercellular transfer of toxic components after laser | |||
irradiation. May JF, Rounds DE, Cone CD. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Theor Biol. 1971 Jan;30(1):151-81. <strong>Unified theory on the basic mechanism of normal mitotic control | |||
and oncogenesis.</strong> Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Oncology. 1971;25(2):168-82. <strong>Control of somatic cell mitosis by simulated changes in the | |||
transmembrane potential level.</strong> Cone CD Jr, Tongier M Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Acta Cytol. 1969 Oct;13(10):576-82. <strong>Autosynchrony and self-induced mitosis in sarcoma cell | |||
networks.</strong> Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1980;339:115-31. <strong>Ionically mediated induction of mitogenesis in CNS | |||
neurons.</strong> Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Science. 1976 Apr 9;192(4235):155-8. <strong>Induction of mitosis in mature neurons in central nervous | |||
system by sustained depolarization.</strong> Cone CD Jr, Cone CM. DNA synthesis and mitosis have been | |||
induced in vitro in fully differentiated neurons from the central nervous system by depolarization with a | |||
variety of agents that produce a sustained rise in the intracellular sodium ion concentration and a decrease | |||
in the potassium ion concentration. Depolarization was followed in less than 1 hour by an increase in RNA | |||
synthesis and in 3 hours by initiation of DNA synthesis. Apparently normal nuclear mitosis ensued, but | |||
cytokinesis was not completed in most cells; this resulted in the formation of binucleate neurons. The | |||
daughter nuclei each contained the same amount of DNA as the diploid preinduction parental neurons; this | |||
implies that true mitogenic replication was induced. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1974;238:420-35. <strong>The role of the surface electrical transmembrane potential in | |||
normal and malignant mitogenesis</strong>. Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1974;238:451-6. <strong>Panel discussion: The role of electrical potential at the cellular | |||
level in growth and development.</strong> Becker RO, Cone CD, Jaffe LF, Parsegian VA, Pohl HA, Weiss L. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Cell Physiol. 1973 Dec;82(3):373-86. <strong>Contact inhibition of division: involvement of the electrical | |||
transmembrane potential.</strong> Cone CD Jr, Tongier M Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Theor Biol. 1971 Jan;30(1):183-94. <strong>Maintenance of mitotic homeostasis in somatic cell | |||
populations.</strong> Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Oncology. 1970;24(6):438-70. <strong>Variation of the transmembrane potential level as a basic mechanism of | |||
mitosis control.</strong> Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Trans N Y Acad Sci. 1969 Apr;31(4):404-27. <strong>Electroosmotic interactions accompanying mitosis | |||
initation in sarcoma cells in vitro. | |||
</strong> | |||
Cone CD Jr. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rheum Dis Clin North Am. 2005 Feb;31(1):115-29, ix-x. <strong>Circadian rhythms and arthritis. | |||
</strong>Cutolo M, Masi AT. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Neuroscience. 1985 Dec;16(4):859-63. <strong>Day-night cycle of lipid peroxidation in rat cerebral cortex | |||
and their relationship to the glutathione cycle and superoxide dismutase activity.</strong> Diaz-Munoz | |||
M, Hernandez-Munoz R, Suarez J, Chagoya de Sanchez V. Lipoperoxidation, glutathione cycle components and | |||
superoxide dismutase activity show a day-night rhythm in the cerebral cortex of the rat. <strong>The highest | |||
lipoperoxidative activity is observed during the night (20.00-04.00 h). | |||
</strong> | |||
The enhancement in lipoperoxidation occurs concurrently with a decrease in glutathione peroxidase activity, | |||
an increase in superoxide dismutase activity and an increase in the double bonds in the brain cortex lipid | |||
fraction. The changes described in this paper seem to be related to a succession of light and dark periods, | |||
or to fasting and feeding periods. We propose that those fluctuations could act as a physiological | |||
oscillator with an important role in modulating the membrane properties of the nerve cell. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res. 1977 Mar 4;123(1):137-45. <strong>Daily variations of various parameters of serotonin metabolism | |||
in the rat brain.</strong> | |||
<strong>II. Circadian variations in serum and cerebral tryptophan levels: lack of correlation with 5-HT | |||
turnover. | |||
</strong>Hery F, Chouvet G, Kan JP, Pujol JF, Glowinski J. Rats submitted to regular 12 h cycles of light | |||
and darkness for three weeks were sacrificed at various times of the day. 5-HT, 5-HIAA and tryptophan levels | |||
were estimated in the fronto-parietal cerebral cortex. Tyrosine and free and total tryptophan levels in | |||
serum were estimated in parallel. Significant circadian variations in 5-HT and 5-HIAA levels were found in | |||
cerebral tissues. The peaks of 5-HIAA levels were dectected during the lignt and dark periods respectively, | |||
the maximal fluctuations being seen between 17.00 h and 21.00 h, two times separating the light off. | |||
Important significant circadian variations in free and total <strong>serum tryptophan</strong> levels were | |||
also observed<strong>. In both cases, the maximal levels were found during the middle of the dark | |||
phase</strong> after the peak of 5-HIAA levels. The circadian rhythm of tyrosine levels in serum was in | |||
opposite phase with that of tryptophan (free or total). The diurnal changes in tryptophan content in | |||
cerebral tissues seemed thus related to those found in serum. Taking in consideration results obtained in | |||
previous studies 16,17 carried out in similar experimental conditions, it was concluded that the parallel | |||
increase in serum free tryptophan and in tissues 5-HIAA levels seen during the night were not related to a | |||
stimulation of 5-HT turnover. Indeed 5-HT synthesis is minimal at this time16. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Kryukov V.I. <strong>An attention model based on the principle of dominanta</strong> | |||
<strong> | |||
// <em>Proceedings in Nonlinear Science. Neurocomputers and Attention. I: Neurobiology, Synchronization, | |||
and Chaos.</em></strong> 1989. Ed. by A.Y. Holden and V.I. Kryukov, pp. 319-351. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrinol Exp. 1976 Jun;10(2):131-7. <strong>Diurnal variation in the effect of melatonin on plasma and | |||
muscle free fatty acid levels in the pigeon.</strong> John TM, George JC. Pigeons maintained on standard | |||
diet and held under 12 h daily photo-period in a controlled environmental room, were given intravenous | |||
injections of melatonin. A low dose (1.25 mg/kg body weight) of melatonin when given in the middle of the | |||
scotophase, produced a significant increase in plasma FFA when estimated at 20 min and 90 min | |||
post-injection, whereas no significant change was seen with injections given in the middle of the | |||
photophase. No significant change in muscle FFA level was obtained either during the photophase or the | |||
scotophase when estimated at 90 min postinjection. <strong>With a higher dose (5 mg/kg body weight) of | |||
melatonin given in the scotophase, on the other hand, a significant increase in both plasma as well as | |||
muscle FFA levels was obtained at 90 min post-injection but there was no effect on plasma FFA at 20 min | |||
or 90 min</strong> post-injection in the photophase and at 20 min in the scotophase. It is concluded | |||
that <strong> | |||
melatonin has a lipid mobilizing action in the pigeon when administered during the scotophase.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Exp Brain Res. 2001 Feb;136(3):313-20. <strong>Enhanced neurogenesis after transient global ischemia in the | |||
dentate gyrus of the rat.</strong> Kee NJ, Preston E, Wojtowicz JM. "Certain insults such as epileptic | |||
seizures and ischemia are known to enhance the rate of neuronal production. We analyzed this phenomenon | |||
using the temporary occlusion of the two carotid arteries combined with arterial hypotension as a method to | |||
induce ischemia in rats. We measured the rate of cell production and their state of differentiation with a | |||
mitotic indicator, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), in combination with the immunohistochemical detection of | |||
neuronal markers. One week after the ischemic episode, the cell production in dentate gyrus was increased | |||
two- to threefold more than the basal level seen in control animals. <strong> | |||
Two weeks after ischemia, over 60% of these cells became young neurons as determined by colabeling with | |||
BrdU and a cytoplasmic protein (CRMP-4) involved in axonal guidance during development. Five weeks after | |||
the ischemia, over 60% of new neurons expressed calbindin, a calcium-binding protein normally expressed | |||
in mature granule neurons.</strong> In addition to more cells being generated, a greater proportion of | |||
all new cells remained in the differentiated but not fully mature state during the 2- to 5-week period after | |||
ischemia." "The results support the hypothesis that survival of dentate gyrus after ischemia is linked with | |||
enhanced neurogenesis. Additional physiological stimulation after ischemia may be exploited to stimulate | |||
maturation of new neurons and to offer new therapeutic strategies for promoting recovery of neuronal | |||
circuitry in the injured brain." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Cardiol. 1998 Dec 17;82(12A):24U-28U; discussion 39U-41U. <strong>Clinical profiles of plain versus | |||
sustained-release niacin (Niaspan) and the physiologic rationale for nighttime dosing.</strong> Knopp | |||
RH. Niacin is the oldest and most versatile agent in use for the treatment of dyslipidemia. It has | |||
beneficial effects on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; the | |||
apolipoproteins B and A-I constituting these fractions; triglyceride; and lipoprotein(a). Together, these | |||
benefits lead to a diminished incidence of coronary artery disease among niacin users. The chief constraints | |||
against niacin use have been flushing, gastrointestinal discomfort, and metabolic effects including | |||
hepatotoxicity. Time-release niacin has been developed in part to limit flushing, and now a nighttime | |||
formulation (Niaspan) has been developed that assists in containing this untoward effect. In a pivotal | |||
metabolic study, bed-time administration of 1.5 g time-release niacin was shown to have the same beneficial | |||
effects as 1.5 g plain niacin in 3 divided doses and to be well tolerated. <strong>Previous studies suggest | |||
that bedtime niacin administration diminishes lipolysis and release of free fatty acids</strong> to the | |||
liver; this, in turn, leads to an abolition of the usual diurnal increase in plasma triglyceride, which may | |||
result in diminished formation and secretion of triglyceride in the very-low-density lipoprotein fraction. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Pediatr Orthop. 2004 Nov-Dec;24(6):726-31. <strong>Growing pains: are they due to increased growth during | |||
recumbency as documented in a lamb model? | |||
</strong> | |||
Noonan KJ, Farnum CE, Leiferman EM, Lampl M, Markel MD, Wilsman NJ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cell Tissue Kinet. 1977 Nov;10(6):557-68. <strong>Circadian rhythms of presumptive stem cells in three | |||
different epithelia of the mouse.</strong> Potten CS, Al-Barwari SE, Hume WJ, Searle J. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Physiol Res. 1995;44(4):249-56. <strong>Circadian and circaannual oscillations of tissue lipoperoxides in | |||
rats.</strong> Solar P, Toth G, Smajda B, Ahlers I, Ahlersova E. Circadian and circaannual oscillations | |||
of tissue lipid peroxides (LPO) were studied in young male Wistar rats. The concentration of | |||
malondialdehyde, one of LPO degradation products, was measured at 3-h intervals during 24 hours in rats, | |||
adapted to light:dark 12:12 h regimen in the course of the year. LPO in the liver, thymus and bone marrow | |||
oscillated rhythmically in the course of the day and year. Circadian oscillations in all tissues were | |||
two-peaked, with zeniths at various times of the light and dark parts of the day. In the liver and thymus, | |||
<strong>the highest mesors were found during the winter</strong>, in the bone marrow during the spring. The | |||
same holds for amplitude values, with the exception of the bone marrow which exhibited the highest values | |||
during the summer. The reason for the LPO oscillations is probably resulting from the changing ratio of pro- | |||
and anti-oxidative capacities in various tissues during the day and the year. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biofizika. 1976 Jul-Aug;21(4):688-91. <strong>[Circadian rhythms of ultraweak chemiluminescence of bean | |||
roots]</strong> Sul'tsman FM, Petrusevich IuM, Tarusov BN. Circadian rhythms of ultra-weak | |||
chemoluminescence of bean roots were investigated. It was found that under periodical change of light and | |||
darkness and without subsequent illumination a periodical change of spontaneous chemoluminescence of bean | |||
roots was observed. (The study of antiradical activity of the substances extracted from the root showed the | |||
dependence of this activity on illumination conditions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ukr Biokhim Zh. 1977 Sep-Oct;49(5):64-9. [Effect of "carbostimulin", vitamin D 3 and their mixture on bone | |||
tissue regeneration] [Article in Ukrainian] Taran TT, Guly MF, Mykhajlovskyj VO, Dvornykova PD, Fanak MM, | |||
Vorobjov NA. "Healing of the bone injury in rabbits was studied as affected by carbostimulin and its mixture | |||
with vitamin D3. Some biochemical indexes: the content of sialic acids, calcium and citric acid in blood | |||
serum of the animals, intensity of 14C incorporation from NaH14CO3 into the regenerated bone tissue and its | |||
proteins as well as histological studies, data, evidence for a positive effect of the mentioned preparations | |||
on the bone substance regeneration in the animals under experiment." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biofizika. 1961;6(4):490-2. <strong>[Study on ultra-weak spontaneous luminescence of animal cells.]</strong> | |||
Tarusov BN, Polivoda AI, Zhuravlev AI. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biofizika. 1961;6(4):83-5. <strong>Study of the faint spontaneous luminescence of animal cells.</strong> | |||
Tarusov BN, Polivoda AI, Zhuravlev AI. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vopr Med Khim. 1977 May-Jun;(3):375-81. <strong>[Free fatty acids and cholesterol as possible participants | |||
in lipid oxidation radical reactions in animal tissues]</strong> [Article in Russian] Terekhova SF, | |||
Burlakova EB, Elizarova TI. Alterations in concentration of free fatty acids, free cholesterol, native | |||
antioxidants as well as in the antioxidative activity were studied in lipids of mice liver tissue and small | |||
intestinal mucosa. The intensity of free radical reactions in lipids of animal tissues was affected directly | |||
by administration of synthetic inhibitors of the reactions. The inverse correlation was observed between the | |||
alteration in concentrations of native antioxidants and free fatty acids as well as between the | |||
antioxidative activity of lipids and amount of free cholesterol in them. <strong>Free fatty acids appears to | |||
be the constant participants in the system of free radical oxidation of lipids, while cholesterol can | |||
center the system under distinct level of these reactions intensity.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ukhtomsky A.A. <strong><em>Dominanta as factor of behavior // Collected works.</em></strong> | |||
Leningrad, 1950. Vol.1, pp.293-315. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biofizika. 1974 Mar-Apr;19(2):295-9.<strong> | |||
[Formation of pigments of lipid nature in animal tissues during neoplastic growth and irradiation] | |||
</strong> | |||
Vertushkov VT, Ivanov II, Tarusov BN. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biofizika. 1967 Jul-Aug;12(4):739-41. <strong>[Antioxidative activity of blood serum fractions during | |||
malignant degeneration studied by inhibition of chemiluminescence] | |||
</strong> | |||
Zakarian AE, Tarusov BN. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biofizika. 1966;11(5):919-21. <strong>[Inhibition of chemiluminescence of the blood plasma in malignant | |||
growth]</strong> [Article in Russian] Zakarian AE, Tarusov BN. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2008. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<head><title>Cholesterol, longevity, intelligence, and health.</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Cholesterol, longevity, intelligence, and health. | |||
</h1> | |||
<strong> | |||
The biological meaning of cholesterol is just starting to be explored. Everything that doctors know about | |||
cholesterol is wrong. New information about cholesterol is clarifying important issues in physiology and | |||
pathology. | |||
</strong> | |||
Medical magazines and television stations like to propagate the idea that cholesterol is bad stuff, and as a | |||
result, that cliche is known to almost every American. Recent journal articles have promoted the idea that "the | |||
lower the serum cholesterol is, the better" it is for the health of the patient. The theory that heart disease | |||
is "caused by cholesterol" has gone through several stages, and most recently the use of the "statin" drugs has | |||
revived it in a radical way. One consistent theme for fifty years has been that people should eat more | |||
polyunsaturated fat and less saturated fat, to lower their cholesterol, and to avoid butter, cream, eggs, and | |||
"red meat," because they contain both saturated fat and cholesterol. Often, medical attention is focused on the | |||
fats in the atheroma, rather than on the whole disease process, including clotting factors, vascular spasms, | |||
heart rhythm, viscosity of the blood, deposition of calcium and iron in blood vessels, and the whole process of | |||
inflammation, including the reactions to absorbed bowel toxins. Almost 100 years ago, some experiments in Russia | |||
showed that feeding rabbits cholesterol caused them to develop atherosclerosis, but subsequent experiments | |||
showed that rabbits are unusual in responding that way to cholesterol, and that even rabbits don't develop | |||
atherosclerosis from cholesterol if they are given a supplement of thyroid (Friedland, 1933). By 1936, it was | |||
clear that hypercholesterolemia in humans and other animals was caused by hypothyroidism, and that | |||
hypothyroidism caused many diseases to develop, including cardiovascular disease and cancer. There was already | |||
more reason at that time to think that the increased cholesterol was a protective adaptation than to think that | |||
it was maladaptive. The strange idea that cholesterol causes atherosclerosis was revived in the 1950s when the | |||
vegetable oil industry learned that their polyunsaturated oils lowered serum cholesterol. (Many other toxins | |||
lower cholesterol, but that is never mentioned.) The industry began advertising their oils as "heart | |||
protective," and they enlisted some influential organizations to help in their advertising<strong>:</strong> The | |||
American Dietetic Association, the American Heart Association, the US Dept. of Agriculture and FDA, and the AMA. | |||
Besides the early rabbit research, which didn't make their case against cholesterol and might actually have had | |||
implications harmful to their argument (since Anitschkow had used vegetable oil as solvent for his cholesterol | |||
feedings), the oil industry helped to create and promote a large amount of fraudulent and unscientific work. The | |||
death rate from heart disease in the United States began increasing early in the twentieth century, and it | |||
reached its peak from about 1950 to 1975, and then began declining. During the decades in which the death rate | |||
was rising, consumption of animal fat was decreasing, and the use of vegetable oil was increasing. In the | |||
southern European countries that have been said to show that eating very little animal fat prevents heart | |||
disease, the trends after the second world war have been the opposite--they have been eating more animal fat | |||
without an increase in heart disease. The correspondence between heart disease and consumption of saturated fat | |||
and cholesterol is little more than advertising copy. If people were looking for the actual causes of heart | |||
disease, they would consider the factors that changed in the US during the time that heart disease mortality was | |||
increasing. Both increases in harmful factors, and decreases in protective factors would have to be considered. | |||
The consumption of manufactured foods, pollution of air and water, the use of lead in gasoline, cigarette | |||
smoking, increased medicalization and use of drugs, psychosocial and socioeconomic stress, and increased | |||
exposure to radiation--medical, military, and industrial--would be obvious things to consider, along with | |||
decreased intake of some protective nutrients, such as selenium, magnesium, and vitamins. But those harmful | |||
factors all had their defenders<strong>:</strong> Who defends socioeconomic stress? All of the social | |||
institutions that fail to alleviate it. In 1847, Rudolph Virchow was sent to Poland to study the health | |||
situation there, and when he returned, the highly regarded anatomist, physiologist and pathologist announced | |||
that the Poles wouldn't have a health problem if the government would stop oppressing them, and institute | |||
economic reforms to alleviate their poverty. The reforms weren't made, and Virchow lost his job. Other harmful | |||
factors, such as seed oils, degraded foods, and radiation, have specific, very well organized and powerful | |||
lobbies to defend them. Despite the growing knowledge about the dangers of polyunsaturated fats, many medical | |||
articles are still advocating the "official" heart protective diet (e.g., "<strong>... </strong> | |||
diets using nonhydrogenated unsaturated fats as the predominant form of dietary fat," Hu and Willet, 2002). Some | |||
dogs alertly look at the thing a person is pointing at, other dogs just sniff the pointing finger. The | |||
publicists who disregard the complete nutritional and ecological situation, to focus on cholesterol and fat in | |||
the diet, are like the finger sniffers. Recent articles in the medical and lipids journals are praising the 1950 | |||
work of J. W. Gofman, and the 1914 rabbit studies of N. N. Anitschkow, as the research that revealed cholesterol | |||
to be the cause of heart disease. Anitschkow and his co-workers, however, understood that their experiment | |||
hadn't explained human heart disease, and John Gofman, about 50 years after publishing his work on the | |||
lipoproteins, has done some large studies that could be crucial in disproving the doctrine that has become | |||
almost a national religion. He has shown that mortality from both heart disease and cancer corresponds very | |||
closely to the population's exposure to medical services, and specifically to medical radiation. During the peak | |||
years of heart disease mortality, medical x-rays gave very large doses of radiation with each exposure, and the | |||
population was also exposed to radioactive fallout from atomic bomb testing (explosions from 1945 to 1963 | |||
produced a peak of heavy fallout that persisted through the 'sixties and into the 'seventies). Around 1971, | |||
someone noticed that the commercial cholesterol being used in feeding experiments was oxidized, that is, it | |||
wasn't really cholesterol. Comparing carefully prepared, unoxidized cholesterol with the oxidized degraded | |||
material, it was found that dietary cholesterol wasn't necessarily atherogenic (Vine, et al., 1998). Dietitians | |||
often recommend eating poached salmon, rather than "red meat," to lower cholesterol. Experimenters have measured | |||
the toxic oxidized cholesterol in different foods prepared in a variety of ways. Steaming salmon produced | |||
several times as much oxidized cholesterol as frying it, because of the longer cooking time that allowed the | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids to break down, producing toxins such as acrolein and free radicals that oxidize the | |||
cholesterol and other components of the fish. The toxic cholesterol content of the steamed salmon was much | |||
higher than that of beef cooked at a high temperature. When oxidized polyunsaturated oils, such as corn oil or | |||
linoleic acid, are added to food, they appear in the blood lipids, where they accelerate the formation of | |||
cholesterol deposits in arteries (Staprans, et al., 1994, 1996). Stress accelerates the oxidation of the | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids in the body, so people who consume unsaturated vegetable oils and fish will have | |||
some oxidized cholesterol in their tissues. The constant turnover of cholesterol in the tissues tends to lower | |||
the proportion of the toxic oxidized degradation products of cholesterol, but in hypothyroidism, the use of | |||
cholesterol is slowed, allowing the toxic forms to accumulate. Many antioxidant nutrients act like a thyroid | |||
supplement did in the 1934 rabbit experiments, preventing atherosclerosis even when extra toxic cholesterol is | |||
given to the animals. People who eat seafood get much more selenium in their diet than people who eat nothing | |||
from the sea, and selenium is one of the extremely protective nutrients that prevent atherosclerosis in animal | |||
experiments with excess cholesterol. It is well established that several antioxidant nutrients are protective | |||
factors in heart disease. The medical establishment has expended a great amount of money and time in the last 60 | |||
years fighting the use of vitamin E or selenium for treating or preventing heart disease, though many physicians | |||
now take vitamin E themselves. But people who study free radical chemistry recognize that polyunsaturated fats | |||
are highly susceptible to oxidation, and that saturated fats tend to slow their degradation, acting to some | |||
extent as antioxidants. Several experiments and observations have shown that cholesterol itself can protect | |||
against damaging oxidation of polyunsaturated fats, protecting DNA and other vital components of the cell. A | |||
consistent program to prevent the oxidation of cholesterol would have to include all of the vitamins and | |||
minerals that are involved in antioxidant defense, avoidance of nutrients that exacerbate the destructive | |||
oxidations, and an effort to normalize the hormones and other factors, such as carbon dioxide, that have | |||
protective effects against free radical oxidation. A low level of cholesterol might increase susceptibility to | |||
the oxidants. The steroids in general, especially those produced in large amounts, progesterone and DHEA, are | |||
important parts of the antioxidant defenses. Cholesterol, either that produced internally by the cell, or taken | |||
in from the blood stream, is the precursor for all the steroids in the body. Several of the major steroid | |||
hormones are antiinflammatory, and cholesterol itself is antiinflammatory. (Mikko, et al., 2002; Kreines, et | |||
al., 1990). Cholesterol also protects against radiation damage, and many forms of toxin (saponins, cobra venom, | |||
chloroform--W.G. MacCallum, <em> | |||
A Text-book of</em> | |||
<em>Pathology,</em> 1937, Saunders Co.; many more recent studies show that it protects blood cells against | |||
hemolysis--breakdown of red blood cells--caused by heat and other harmful agents; e.g., Dumas, et al., 2002, | |||
Velardi, et al., 1991). Cholesterol, vitamin E, progesterone, and vitamin D are considered to be "structural | |||
antioxidants," that prevent oxidation partly by stabilizing molecular structures. One of the basic functions of | |||
cholesterol seems to be the stabilization of mitochondria, preventing their destruction by stress. Serious | |||
stress lowers ATP, magnesium, and carbon dioxide. When ATP and intracellular magnesium are decreased, | |||
cholesterol synthesis increases. During stress, free fatty acids are released from the tissues, and circulating | |||
in the bloodstream they are highly susceptible to oxidation. They contribute to the formation of the age | |||
pigment, lipofuscin, which is an oxygen-wasting substance that's found in the atheroma plaques in the damaged | |||
blood vessels. Iron and calcium accumulation adds to the tissue damage. The hemolysis which is promoted by | |||
polyunsaturated fats and an imbalance of antioxidants and oxidants, releases iron and heme into the blood | |||
stream. The incidence of atherosclerosis is increased when the body iron stores are high (Kiechl, et al., 1997), | |||
probably because of its role in lipid peroxidation and lipofuscin formation. Especially when the lining of the | |||
blood vessel is too permeable, because of the influence of polyunsaturated fats, prostaglandins, estrogen, etc., | |||
the heme and iron will enter the endothelial cells, where the iron will catalyze the formation of free radicals, | |||
and the heme will be broken down by the enzyme heme oxygenase, into biliverdin, iron, and carbon monoxide, which | |||
can contribute to the oxidative stress of the cells. Carbon monoxide makes the blood vessel lining more | |||
permeable, allowing fats and fibrinogen to enter the cells (Allen, et al., 1988). Although cholesterol is | |||
protective against oxidative and cytolytic damage, the chronic free radical exposure will oxidize it. During the | |||
low cholesterol turnover of hypothyroidism, the oxidized variants of cholesterol will accumulate, so cholesterol | |||
loses its protective functions. When the metabolic pathways of the steroid hormones were being worked out, an | |||
experimenter perfused an isolated ovary with blood. When the amount of cholesterol in the blood pumped into the | |||
ovary was increased, the amount of progesterone in the blood leaving the ovary increased proportionately. In the | |||
healthy organism, cholesterol is constantly being synthesized, and constantly converted into steroid hormones, | |||
and, in the liver, into the bile salts that are secreted to emulsify fats in the intestine. Thyroid hormone and | |||
vitamin A are used in the process of converting cholesterol into pregnenolone, the immediate precursor of | |||
progesterone and DHEA. Anything that interfered with these processes would be disastrous for the organism. The | |||
supply of cholesterol, thyroid and vitamin A must always be adequate for the production of steroid hormones and | |||
bile salts. When stress suppresses thyroid activity, increased cholesterol probably compensates to some extent | |||
by permitting more progesterone to be synthesized. In very young people, the metabolic rate is very high, and | |||
the rapid conversion of cholesterol into pregnenolone, DHEA, and progesterone usually keeps the level of | |||
cholesterol in the blood low. In the 1930s, a rise in the concentration of cholesterol was considered to be one | |||
of the most reliable ways to diagnose hypothyroidism (<em>1936 Yearbook of Neurology, Psychiatry, and | |||
Endocrinology,</em> E.L. Sevringhaus, editor, Chicago, p. 533). With aging, the metabolic rate declines, and | |||
the increase of cholesterol with aging is probably a spontaneous regulatory process, supporting the synthesis of | |||
the protective steroids, especially the neurosteroids in the brain and retina. Many people refer to the | |||
structural importance of cholesterol for "membranes," and often imply that the membranes are just at the surface | |||
of the cell (the plasma membrane). But in fact cholesterol is found in the nucleus in the chromosomes, bound to | |||
DNA and in the nuclear matrix that governs the activation of genes, and in the mitotic spindle, which regulates | |||
separation of the chromosomes during cell division<strong>:</strong> without sufficient cholesterol, cells | |||
divide irregularly, producing aneuploid daughter cells (i.e., they have an abnormal number of chromosomes). | |||
Aneuploidy is now coming to be recognized as an essential feature of cancer cells. A significant amount of | |||
cholesterol was recently discovered to bind to hemoglobin, suggesting that it will be found in association with | |||
many other types of protein, when it occurs to anyone to look for it. Osmotic regulation, which is closely | |||
involved in cell division and other functions, appears to require cholesterol synthesis. Around 1985, a big | |||
study in Hungary showed that lowering cholesterol with drugs caused a huge increase in the cancer death rate. | |||
Hundreds of publications appeared in the U.S. saying that wasn't possible, because low cholesterol is good, the | |||
lower the better. The extreme increase in cancer mortality in the Hungarian study was probably the result of the | |||
drug that was commonly used at that time to lower cholesterol, but the pattern of mortality in that study was | |||
approximately the same pattern seen in any group with very low cholesterol. In the last 20 years, there have | |||
been many studies showing that lowering cholesterol increases mortality, especially from cancer and suicide, and | |||
that people with naturally low cholesterol are more likely to die from cancer, suicide, trauma, and infections | |||
than people with normal or higher than average cholesterol. The increased mortality from accidents and suicide | |||
when cholesterol is lowered is reminiscent of the problems seen in progesterone deficiency, and it's very likely | |||
that a deficiency of the neurosteroids accounts for it. A deficiency of progesterone and other neurosteroids | |||
(the steroids synthesized by the nerves themselves) causes depression of mood and impaired learning ability, | |||
among other neurological changes. As was the case with cancer, the pharmaceutical industry continues to deny | |||
that their anticholesterol drugs cause suicide, depression, and dementia, but there is a large amount of | |||
evidence from human as well as animal studies showing that mood and intelligence are depressed by lowering | |||
cholesterol. Simply injecting cholesterol into animals can improve their learning ability. In the Framingham | |||
heart study of 1894 people extending over a period of about 20 years, people with cholesterol naturally in the | |||
"desirable" range, below 200 mg.%, scored lower on "verbal fluency, attention/concentration, abstract reasoning, | |||
and a composite score measuring multiple cognitive domains" than those with higher cholesterol (Elias, et al., | |||
2005). | |||
<hr /> | |||
The next step in studies of this sort should be to see how the combination of extra thyroid with adequate | |||
cholesterol influences longevity. The rising cholesterol that commonly occurs with aging is probably only | |||
partial compensation for declining thyroid function, and by optimizing all of the protective factors, radical | |||
changes in the aging process may be possible. In the roundworm C. elegans, which is now a very popular animal | |||
for testing aging theories, because its genes and cells have been thoroughly "mapped," it was recently found | |||
that adding a gene that simply allows it to synthesize cholesterol, rather than depending on food for its | |||
sterols, increased its life span by as much as 131% (Lee, et al., 2005). That would be like increasing the human | |||
lifespan to about 175 years. These worms are also more resistant than normal to radiation and heat stress. The | |||
cells of the thymus are extremely sensitive to radiation and other stressors, and their enrichment with | |||
cholesterol inhibits lipid peroxidation, DNA degradation, and death in response to radiation (Posokhov, et al., | |||
1992). Many high altitude regions of the world have high levels of background radiation, from minerals as well | |||
as cosmic rays, so it has been dogmatically believed that mortality from cancer and heart disease would increase | |||
with altitude, but the reverse is true. Because oxygen at lower pressure displaces less carbon dioxide from the | |||
blood, the body is able to retain more carbon dioxide at high altitude. Carbon dioxide protects against free | |||
radicals, and also helps to deliver oxygen to tissues, to maintain efficient energy production, and to prevent | |||
cellular stress. One study found 18 times higher incidence of hypertension in low altitude populations than in | |||
high altitude people (Fiori, et al., 2000). For many years, these principles have been applied in treating | |||
atherosclerosis and other degenerative diseases, in high altitude health resorts. Even a short period of hypoxic | |||
treatment can improve the body's ability to eliminate atherogenic lipid peroxides, possibly by improving the | |||
stress-resistant functions of the liver (Meerson, et al., 1988; Aleshin, et al., 1993; Kitaev, et al., 1999). I | |||
think editors of medical journals generally see themselves as the purveyors of enlightenment, i.e., as the | |||
pushers of the stylish and prestigious doctrines. (Selectivity of evidence to serve the received doctrine is the | |||
commonest form of scientific dishonesty.) But because their mental framework is culturally narrow, they | |||
sometimes publish things which later could turn out to be embarrassing (if inconsistency could embarrass such | |||
types). The recent discovery that the size of the LDL particle is a predominant factor in the development of | |||
atherosclerosis is one of those things that the editors and medical professors should find embarrassing. Smaller | |||
lipoprotein particles have a greater surface area exposed to the oxidative factors in the serum, and so are more | |||
rapidly degraded into toxic substances. People with larger LDL particles are remarkably resistant to heart | |||
disease, and the drug companies are looking for a way to turn their lipoproteins into products. But the | |||
conditions that govern the size of the LDL particles are physically and chemically reasonable, and are causing | |||
confusion among the doctinaire. There have been several studies in India showing that consumption of butter and | |||
ghee is associated with a low incidence of heart disease; for example, according to one study, people in the | |||
north eat 19 times more fat (mostly butter and ghee) than in the south, yet the incidence of heart disease is | |||
seven times higher in the south. A study in Sweden found that the fatty acids in milk products are associated | |||
with larger LDL particles (Sjogren, et al., 2004). In a 35 day study, when butter (20% of the calories) was | |||
compared to various kinds of margarine (with more trans fatty acids) in a similar quantity, the LDL particles | |||
were bigger on the butter diet (Mauger, et al., 2003). But in a study of the habitual diet of 414 people, large | |||
LDL particles were found to be correlated with increased intake of protein, animal fat, and trans fatty acids | |||
(Kim and Campos, 2003). In a study of the effect of dietary cholesterol on the atherogenicity of the blood | |||
lipids, 52 people were given either an egg diet (with 640 mg. of extra cholesterol per day) or a placebo diet | |||
for 30 days. Those whose LDL increased the most on the high cholesterol diet had the largest LDL particle size | |||
(Herron, et al., 2004). They concluded that "these data indicate that the consumption of a high-cholesterol diet | |||
does not negatively influence the atherogenicity of the LDL particle." A similar study in Mexico found that | |||
"Intake of 2 eggs/d results in the maintenance of LDL:HDL and in the generation of a less atherogenic LDL in | |||
this population of Mexican children" (Ballesteros, et al., 2004). The estrogen industry tried to get into the | |||
heart disease business several times over the last half century, and they are still trying, but the issue of | |||
estrogen's harmful effects on LDL particle size is getting some attention. Estrogen clearly decreases the size | |||
of the LDL particles (Campos, et al., 1997). The LDL particles also get smaller at menopause, and in polycystic | |||
ovary syndrome, and in preeclamptic pregnancies, all of which involve a low ratio of progesterone to estrogen. | |||
But there are still journals publishing claims that estrogen will protect against heart disease, by reducing the | |||
atherogenic response in increasingly mysterious ways. Occasionally, people have argued not only that estrogen is | |||
the factor that protects women against heart attacks, but that androgens predispose men to heart disease. One of | |||
their arguments has been that androgens lower HDL, the "good" form of cholesterol. However, there are many | |||
studies that show that testosterone and DHEA (Arad, et al., 1989) are protective against atherosclerosis. The | |||
LDL particle size is increased by androgens, and postprandial triglyceridemia is decreased (Hislop, et al., | |||
2001). The studies in the 1930s that showed the protective effects of thyroid hormone against atherosclerosis | |||
and heart disease have sometimes been interpreted to mean that the thyroid is protective <strong><em>because</em | |||
></strong> | |||
it lowers the cholesterol, but since cholesterol is protective, rather than harmful, something else explains the | |||
protective effect. Ever since the time of Virchow, who called atherosclerosis <strong><em>arteritis | |||
deformans,</em></strong> | |||
the inflammatory nature of the problem has been clear to those who aren't crazed by the anticholesterol cult. We | |||
are all subject to a variable degree of inflammatory stimulation from the endotoxin absorbed from the intestine, | |||
but a healthy liver normally prevents it from reaching the general circulation, and produces a variety of | |||
protective factors. The HDL lipoprotein is one of these, which protects against inflammation by binding | |||
bacterial endotoxins that have reached the bloodstream. (Things that increase absorption of endotoxin--exercise, | |||
estrogen, ethanol--cause HDL to rise.) Chylomicrons and VLDL also absorb, bind, and help to eliminate | |||
endotoxins. All sorts of stress and malnutrition increase the tendency of endotoxin to leak into the | |||
bloodstream. Thyroid hormone, by increasing the turnover of cholesterol and its conversion into the protective | |||
steroids, is a major factor in keeping the inflammatory processes under control. In hypothyroidism, the | |||
pituitary secretes more TSH to activate the thyroid gland, but TSH itself has a variety of pro-inflammatory | |||
actions. The C-reactive protein (CRP), which is recognized as a factor contributing to atherosclerosis, is | |||
increased in association with TSH. CRP activates mast cells, which are found in the atheroma plaques, to produce | |||
a variety of pro-inflammatory substances, including histamine. The belief that cells are controlled by a plasma | |||
membrane, and that cholesterol's main function is to participate in that membrane, has led to a culture that | |||
treats cholesterol physiology with little curiosity. A different perspective on the cell starts with a | |||
recognition of the lipophilic nature of the structural proteins (not "membrane proteins," but things like | |||
cytoskeleton-cytoplasmic ground substance, spindle, centrosome-centrioles, nuclear matrix, etc.), with which | |||
lipids interact. Modifying an extremely complex system, the living substance, cholesterol participates in | |||
complexity, and must be investigated with subtlety. I suspect that the physiological meaning of cholesterol has | |||
to do with movement, stability, differentiation, memory, and sensitivity of the parts of the cells, that is, | |||
with everything physiological. The functions of cholesterol parallel the functions of other sterols in plants | |||
and other types of organism. Its functions have been refined and extended with the development of other | |||
steroids, such as progesterone, as biological requirements have evolved, but cholesterol is still at the center | |||
of this system. To deliberately interfere with its synthesis, as contemporary medicine does, reveals a terrible | |||
arrogance. Many participants in the cholesterol-lowering cult believe that they have succeeded in hijacking our | |||
science culture, but when the patents on another generation of their drugs have expired, the cult could begin to | |||
fade away. | |||
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Fellin R<p></p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2007. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Protective CO2 and aging</title></head> | |||
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<h1> | |||
Protective CO2 and aging | |||
</h1> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
The therapeutic effects of increasing carbon dioxide are being more widely recognized in recent years. Even | |||
Jane Brody, the NY Times writer on health topics, has favorably mentioned the use of the Buteyko method for | |||
asthma, and the idea of "permissive hypercapnia" during mechanical ventilation, to prevent lung damage from | |||
excess oxygen, has been discussed in medical journals. But still very few biologists recognize its role as a | |||
fundamental, universal protective factor. I think it will be helpful to consider some of the ways carbon | |||
dioxide might be controlling situations that otherwise are poorly understood. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The brain has a high rate of oxidative metabolism, and so it forms a very large proportion of the carbon | |||
dioxide produced by an organism. It also governs, to a great extent, the metabolism of other tissues, | |||
including their consumption of oxygen and production of carbon dioxide or lactic acid. Within a particular | |||
species, the rate of oxygen consumption increases in proportion to brain size, rather than body weight. | |||
Between very different species, the role of the brain in metabolism is even more obvious, since the resting | |||
metabolic rate corresponds to the size of the brain. For example, a cat's brain is about the size of a | |||
crocodile's, and their oxygen consumption at rest is similar, despite their tremendous difference in body | |||
size. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Stress has to be understood as a process that develops in time, and the brain (especially the neocortex and | |||
the frontal lobes) organizes the adaptive and developmental processes in both the spatial and temporal | |||
dimensions. The meaning of a situation influences the way the organism responds. For example, the stress of | |||
being restrained for a long time can cause major gastrointestinal bleeding and ulcerization, but if the | |||
animal has the opportunity to bite something during the stress (signifying its ability to fight back, and | |||
the possibility of escape) it can avoid the stress ulcers. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The patterning of the nervous activity throughout the body governs the local ability to produce carbon | |||
dioxide. When the cortex of the brain is damaged or removed, an animal becomes rigid, so the cortex is | |||
considered to have a "tonic inhibitory action" on the body. But when the nerves are removed from a muscle | |||
(for example, by disease or accident), the muscle goes into a state of constant activity, and its ability to | |||
oxidize glucose and produce carbon dioxide is reduced, while its oxidation of fatty acids persists, | |||
increasing the production of toxic oxidative fragments of the fatty acids, which contributes to the muscle's | |||
atrophy. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The organism's intentions, expectations, or plans, are represented in the nervous system as a greater | |||
readiness for action, and in the organs and tissues controlled by the nerves, as an increase or decrease of | |||
oxidative efficiency, analogous to the differences between innervated and denervated muscles. This pattern | |||
in the nervous system has been called "the acceptor of action," because it is continually being compared | |||
with the actual situation, and being refined as the situation is evaluated. The state of the organism, under | |||
the influence of a particular acceptor of action, is called a "functional system," including all the | |||
components of the organism that participate most directly in realizing the intended adaptive action. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The actions of nerves can be considered anabolic, because during a stressful situation in which the | |||
catabolic hormones of adaption, e.g., cortisol, increase, the tissues of the functional system are | |||
protected, and while idle tissues may undergo autophagy or other form of involution, the needs of the active | |||
tissues are supplied with nutrients from their breakdown, allowing them to change and, when necessary, grow | |||
in size or complexity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The brain's role in protecting against injury by stress, when it sees a course of action, has a parallel in | |||
the differences between concentric (positive, muscle shortening) and eccentric (negative, lengthening under | |||
tension) exercise, and also with the differences between innervated and denervated muscles. In eccentric | |||
exercise and denervation, less oxygen is used and less carbon dioxide is produced, while lactic acid | |||
increases, displacing carbon dioxide, and more fat is oxidized. Prolonged stress similarly decreases carbon | |||
dioxide and increases lactate, while increasing the use of fat. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Darkness is stressful and catabolic. For example, in aging people, the morning urine contains nearly all of | |||
the calcium lost during the 24 hour period, and mitochondria are especially sensitive to the destructive | |||
effects of darkness. Sleep reduces the destructive catabolic effects of darkness. During the | |||
rapid-eye-movement (dreaming) phase of sleep, breathing is inhibited, and the level of carbon dioxide in the | |||
tissues accumulates. In restful sleep, the oxygen tension is frequently low enough, and the carbon dioxide | |||
tension high enough, to trigger the multiplication of stem cells and mitochondria. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Dreams represent the "acceptor of action" operating independently of the sensory information that it | |||
normally interacts with. During dreams, the brain (using a system called the Ascending Reticular Activating | |||
System) disconnects itself from the sensory systems. I think this is the nervous equivalent of | |||
concentric/positive muscle activity, in the sense that the brain is in control of its actions. The active, | |||
dreaming phase of sleep occurs more frequently in the later part of the night, as morning approaches. This | |||
is the more stressful part of the night, with cortisol and some other stress hormones reaching a peak at | |||
dawn, so it would be reasonable for the brain's defensive processes to be most active at that time. The | |||
dreaming process in the brain is associated with deep muscle relaxation, which is probably associated with | |||
the trophic (restorative) actions of the nerves. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In ancient China the Taoists were concerned with longevity, and according to Joseph Needham (<em>Science and | |||
Civilization in China</em>) their methods included the use of herbs, minerals, and steroids extracted | |||
from the urine of children. Some of those who claimed extreme longevity practiced controlled breathing and | |||
tai chi (involving imagery, movement, and breating), typically in the early morning hours, when stress | |||
reduction is most important. As far as I know, there are no studies of carbon dioxide levels in | |||
practitioners of tai chi, but the sensation of warmth they typically report suggests that it involves | |||
hypoventilation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1960s, a Russian researcher examined hospital records of measurements of newborn babies, and found | |||
that for several decades the size of their heads had been increasing. He suggested that it might be the | |||
result of increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The experiences and nutrition of a pregnant animal are known to affect the expression of genes in the | |||
offspring, affecting such things as allergies, metabolic rate, brain size, and intelligence. Miles Storfer | |||
(1999) has reviewed the evidence for epigenetic environmental control of brain size and intelligence. The | |||
main mechanisms of epigenetic effects or "imprinting" are now known to involve methylation and acetylation | |||
of the chromosomes (DNA and histones). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Certain kinds of behavior, as well as nutrition and other environmental factors, increase the production and | |||
retention of carbon dioxide. The normal intrauterine level of carbon dioxide is high, and it can be | |||
increased or decreased by changes in the mother's physiology. The effects of carbon dioxide on many | |||
biological processes involving methylation and acetylation of the genetic material suggest that the | |||
concentration of carbon dioxide during gestation might regulate the degree to which parental imprinting will | |||
persist in the developing fetus. There is some evidence of increased demethylation associated with the low | |||
level of oxygen in the uterus (Wellman, et al., 2008). A high metabolic rate and production of carbon | |||
dioxide would increase the adaptability of the new organism, by decreasing the limiting genetic imprints. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A quick reduction of carbon dioxide caused by hyperventilation can provoke an epileptic seizure, and can | |||
increase muscle spasms and vascular leakiness, and (by releasing serotonin and histamine) contribute to | |||
inflammation and clotting disorders. On a slightly longer time scale, a reduction of carbon dioxide can | |||
increase the production of lactic acid, which is a promoter of inflammation and fibrosis. A prolonged | |||
decrease in carbon dioxide can increase the susceptibility of proteins to glycation (the addition of | |||
aldehydes, from polyunsaturated fat peroxidation or methylglyoxal from lactate metabolism, to amino groups), | |||
and a similar process is likely to contribute to the methylation of histones, a process that increases with | |||
aging. Histones regulate genetic activity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
With aging, DNA methylation is increased (Bork, et al., 2009). <strong>I suggest that methylation stabilizes | |||
and protects cells when growth and regeneration aren't possible (and that it's likely to increase when | |||
CO2 isn't available). | |||
</strong> | |||
Hibernation (Morin and Storey, 2009) and sporulation (Ruiz-Herrera, 1994; Clancy, et al., 2002) appear to | |||
use methylation protectively. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Parental stress, prenatal stress, early life stress, and even stress in adulthood contribute to "imprinting | |||
of the genes," partly through methylation of DNA and the histones. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Methionine and choline are the main dietary sources of methyl donors. Restriction of methionine has many | |||
protective effects, including increased average (42%) and maximum (44%) longevity in rats (Richie, et al., | |||
1994). Restriction of methyl donors causes demethylation of DNA (Epner, 2001). <strong> </strong> | |||
The age accelerating effect of methionine might be related to disturbing the methylation balance, | |||
inappropriately suppressing cellular activity. Besides its effect on the methyl pool, methionine inhibits | |||
thyroid function and damages mitochondria. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The local concentration of carbon dioxide in specific tissues and organs can be adjusted by nervous and | |||
hormonal activation or inhibition of the carbonic anhydrase enzymes, that accelerate the oonversion of CO2 | |||
to carbonic acid, H2CO3. The activity of carbonic anhydrase can determine the density and strength of the | |||
skeleton, the excitability of nerves, the accumulation of water, and can regulate the structure and function | |||
of the tissues and organs. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ordinarily, carbon dioxide and bicarbonate are thought of only in relation to the regulation of pH, and only | |||
in a very general way. Because of the importance of keeping the pH of the blood within a narrow range, | |||
carbon dioxide is commonly thought of as a toxin, because an excess can cause unconsciousness and acidosis. | |||
But increasing carbon dioxide doesn't necessarily cause acidosis, and acidosis caused by carbon dioxide | |||
isn't as harmful as lactic acidosis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Frogs and toads, being amphibians, are especially dependent on water, and in deserts or areas with a dry | |||
season they can survive a prolonged dry period by burrowing into mud or sand. Since they may be buried 10 or | |||
11 inches below the surface, they are rarely found, and so haven't been extensively studied. In species that | |||
live in the California desert, they have been known to survive 5 years of burial without rainfall, despite a | |||
moderately warm average temperature of their surroundings. One of their known adaptations is to produce a | |||
high level of urea, allowing them to osmotically absorb and retain water. (Very old people sometimes have | |||
extremely high urea and osmotic tension.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some laboratory studies show that as a toad burrows into mud, the amount of carbon dioxide in its tissues | |||
increases. Their skin normally functions like a lung, exchanging oxygen for carbon dioxide. If the toad's | |||
nostrils are at the surface of the mud, as dormancy begins its breathing will gradually slow, increasing the | |||
carbon dioxide even more. Despite the increasing carbon dioxide, the pH is kept stable by an increase of | |||
bicarbonate (Boutilier, et al., 1979). A similar increase of bicarbonate has been observed in hibernating | |||
hamsters and doormice. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Thinking about the long dormancy of frogs reminded me of a newspaper story I read in the 1950s. Workers | |||
breaking up an old concrete structure found a dormant toad enclosed in the concrete, and it revived soon | |||
after being released. The concrete had been poured decades earlier. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although systematic study of frogs or toads during their natural buried estivation has been very limited, | |||
there have been many reports of accidental discoveries that suggest that the dormant state might be extended | |||
indefinitely if conditions are favorable. Carbon dioxide has antioxidant effects, and many other stabilizing | |||
actions, including protection against hypoxia and the excitatory effects of intracellular calcium and | |||
inflammation (Baev, et al., 1978, 1995; Bari, et al., 1996; Brzecka, 2007; Kogan, et al., 1994; Malyshev, et | |||
al., 1995). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When mitochondria are "uncoupled," they produce more carbon dioxide than normal, and the mitochondria | |||
produce fewer free radicals. Animals with uncoupled mitochondria live longer than animals with the ordinary, | |||
more efficient mitochondria, that produce more reactive oxidative fragments. One effect of the high rate of | |||
oxidation of the uncoupled mitochondria is that they can eliminate polyunsatured fatty acids that might | |||
otherwise be integrated into tissue structures, or function as inappropriate regulatory signals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Birds have a higher metabolic rate than mammals of the same size, and live longer. Their tissues contain | |||
fewer of the highly unsaturated fatty acids. Queen bees, which live many times longer than worker bees, have | |||
mainly monounsaturated fats in their tissues, while the tissues of the short-lived worker bees, receiving a | |||
different diet, within a couple of weeks of hatching will contain highly unsaturated fats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bats have a very high metabolic rate, and an extremely long lifespan for an animal of their size. While most | |||
animals of their small size live only a few years, many bats live a few decades. Bat caves usually have | |||
slightly more carbon dioxide than the outside atmosphere, but they usually contain a large amount of | |||
ammonia, and bats maintain a high serum level of carbon dioxide, which protects them from the otherwise | |||
toxic effects of the ammonia. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The naked mole rat, another small animal with an extremely long lifespan (in captivity they have lived up to | |||
30 years, 9 or 10 times longer than mice of the same size) has a low basal metabolic rate, but I think | |||
measurements made in laboratories might not represent their metabolic rate in their natural habitat. They | |||
live in burrows that are kept closed, so the percentage of oxygen is lower than in the outside air, and the | |||
percentage of carbon dioxide ranges from 0.2% to 5% (atmospheric CO2 is about 0.038). The temperature and | |||
humidity in their burrows can be extremely high, and to be very meaningful their metabolic rate would have | |||
to be measured when their body temperature is raised by the heat in the burrow. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When they have been studied in Europe and the US, there has been no investigation of the effect of altitude | |||
on their metabolism, and these animals are native to the high plains of Kenya and Ethiopia, where the low | |||
atmospheric pressure would be likely to increase the level of carbon dioxide in their tissues. Consequently, | |||
I doubt that the longevity seen in laboratory situations accurately reflects the longevity of the animals in | |||
their normal habitat. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides living in a closed space with a high carbon dioxide content, mole rats have another similarity to | |||
bees. In each colony, there is only one female that reproduces, the queen, and, like a queen bee, she is the | |||
largest individual in the colony. In beehives, the workers carefully regulate the carbon dioxide | |||
concentration, which varies from about 0.2% to 6%, similar to that of the mole rat colony. A high carbon | |||
dioxide content activates the ovaries of a queen bee, increasing her fertility. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since queen bees and mole rats live in the dark, I think their high carbon dioxide compensates for the lack | |||
of light. (Both light and CO2 help to maintain oxidative metabolism and inhibit lactic acid formation.) Mole | |||
rats are believed to sleep very little. During the night, normal people tolerate more CO2, and so breathe | |||
less, especially near morning, with increased active dreaming sleep. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A mole rat has never been known to develop cancer. Their serum C-reactive protein is extremely low, | |||
indicating that they are resistant to inflammation. In humans and other animals that are susceptible to | |||
cancer, one of the genes that is likely to be silenced by stress, aging, and methylation is p53, a | |||
tumor-suppressor gene. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If the intrauterine experience, with low oxygen and high carbon dioxide, serves to "reprogram" cells to | |||
remove the accumulated effects of age and stress, and so to maximize the developmental potential of the new | |||
organism, a life that's lived with nearly those levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide might be able to avoid | |||
the progressive silencing of genes and loss of function that cause aging and degenerative diseases. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Several diseases and syndromes are now thought to involve abnormal methylation of genes. Prader-Willi | |||
sydrome, Angelman's syndrome, and various "autistic spectrum disorders," as well as post-traumatic stress | |||
disorder and several kinds of cancer seem to involve excess methylation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Moderate methionine restriction (for example, using gelatin regularly in the diet) might be practical, but | |||
if increased carbon dioxide can activate the demethylase enzymes in a controlled way, it might be a useful | |||
treatment for the degenerative diseases and for aging itself. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The low carbon dioxide production of hypothyroidism (e.g., Lee and Levine, 1999), and the respiratory | |||
alkalosis of estrogen excess, are often overlooked. An adequate supply of calcium, and sometimes | |||
supplementation of salt and baking soda, can increase the tissue content of CO2. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2009 Apr;296(4):E621-7. <strong>Uncoupling protein-2 regulates lifespan in | |||
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Fiziol Zh SSSR 1978 Oct;64(10):1456-62. <strong>[Role of CO2 fixation in increasing the body's resistance to | |||
acute hypoxia].</strong> Baev VI, Vasil'ev VV, Nikolaeva EN. In rats, the phenomenon of considerable | |||
increase in resistance to acute hypoxia observed after 2-hour stay under conditions of gradually increasing | |||
concentration of CO2, decreasing concentration of O2, and external cooling at 2--3 degrees seems to be based | |||
mainly on changes in concentration of CO2 (ACCORDINGLY, PCO2 and other forms of CO2 in the blood). The high | |||
resistance to acute hypoxia develops as well after subcutaneous or i.v. administration of 1.0 ml of water | |||
solution (169.2 mg/200 g) NaHCO2, (NH4)2SO4, MgSO4, MnSO4, and ZnSO4 (in proportion: 35 : 5 : 2 : 0.15 : | |||
0.15, resp.) or after 1-hour effect of increased hypercapnia and hypoxia without cooling. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Fiziol Zh Im I M Sechenova 1995 Feb;81(2):47-52.<strong> | |||
[The unknown physiological role of carbon dioxide].</strong> Baev VI, Vasil'eva IV, L'vov SN, Shugalei | |||
IV [The data suggests that carbon dioxide is a natural element of the organism antioxidant defence system. | |||
ion poisoning]. | |||
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<p> | |||
Stroke. 1996 Sep;27(9):1634-9; discussion 1639-40. <strong>Differential effects of short-term hypoxia and | |||
hypercapnia on N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced cerebral vasodilatation in piglets.</strong> Bari F, Errico | |||
RA, Louis TM, Busija DW. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vojnosanit Pregl. 1996 Jul-Aug;53(4):261-74. <strong>[Carbon dioxide inhibits the generation of active forms | |||
of oxygen in human and animal cells and the significance of the phenomenon in biology and | |||
medicine]</strong> [Article in Serbian] Boljevic S, Kogan AH, Gracev SV, Jelisejeva SV, Daniljak IG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Exp Biol. 1979 Oct;82:357-65. <strong>Acid-base relationships in the blood of the toad, Bufo marinus. III. | |||
The effects of burrowing. | |||
</strong> | |||
Boutilier RG, Randall DJ, Shelton G, Toews DP. | |||
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<p> | |||
Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars). 2007;67(2):197-206. <strong>Role of hypercapnia in brain oxygenation in | |||
sleep-disordered breathing.</strong> Brzecka A. Adaptive mechanisms may diminish the detrimental effects | |||
of recurrent nocturnal hypoxia in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). The potential role of elevated carbon | |||
dioxide (CO2) in improving brain oxygenation in the patients with severe OSA syndrome is discussed. CO2 | |||
increases oxygen uptake by its influence on the regulation of alveolar ventilation and ventilation-perfusion | |||
matching, facilitates oxygen delivery to the tissues by changing the affinity of oxygen to hemoglobin, and | |||
increases cerebral blood flow by effects on arterial blood pressure and on cerebral vessels. Recent clinical | |||
studies show improved brain oxygenation when hypoxia is combined with hypercapnia. Anti-inflammatory and | |||
protective against organ injury properties of CO2 may also have therapeutic importance. These biological | |||
effects of hypercapnia may improve brain oxygenation under hypoxic conditions. This may be especially | |||
important in patients with severe OSA syndrome. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ageing Res Rev. 2009 Oct;8(4):268-76. Epub 2009 Apr 1. <strong>The role of epigenetics in aging and | |||
age-related diseases.</strong> Calvanese V, Lara E, Kahn A, Fraga MF. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
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[Effect of restricting amino acids except methionine on mitochondrial oxidative stress.] | |||
</strong>[Article in Spanish] Caro P, G"mez J, S"nchez I, L"pez-Torres M, Barja G. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
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interplay between arcuate nucleus T3 and UCP2.</strong> | |||
Coppola A, Liu ZW, Andrews ZB, Paradis E, Roy MC, Friedman JM, Ricquier D, Richard D, Horvath TL, Gao XB, | |||
Diano S. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ter Arkh. 1995;67(3):23-6. <strong>[Changes in the sensitivity of leukocytes to the inhibiting effect of CO2 | |||
on their generation of active forms of oxygen in bronchial asthma patients]</strong> Daniliak IG, Kogan | |||
AKh, Sumarokov AV, Bolevich S. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cell Metab. 2007 Dec;6(6):497-505. <strong>Respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle delays death and | |||
diminishes age-related disease.</strong> Gates AC, Bernal-Mizrachi C, Chinault SL, Feng C, Schneider JG, | |||
Coleman T, Malone JP, Townsend RR, Chakravarthy MV, Semenkovich CF. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocr Pract. 2009 Jun 2:1-13.<strong> | |||
Fibrotic Appearance of Lungs in Severe Hypothyroidism is Reversible with Thyroxine Replacement.</strong> | |||
George JT, Thow JC, Rodger KA, Mannion R, Jayagopal V. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Bioenerg Biomembr. 2009 Jun;41(3):309-21. Epub 2009 Jul 25. <strong>Effect of methionine dietary | |||
supplementation on mitochondrial oxygen radical generation and oxidative DNA damage in rat liver and | |||
heart. | |||
</strong> | |||
Gomez J, Caro P, Sanchez I, Naudi A, Jove M, Portero-Otin M, Lopez-Torres M, Pamplona R, Barja G. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996 Jul 23;93(15):7612-7. <strong>Increased tricarboxylic acid cycle flux in rat | |||
brain during forepaw stimulation detected with 1H[13C]NMR. | |||
</strong>Hyder F, Chase JR, Behar KL, Mason GF, Siddeek M, Rothman DL, Shulman RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Can J Neurol Sci. 1979 May;6(2):105-12. <strong>The effects of partial chronic denervation on forearm | |||
metabolism.</strong> Karpati G, Klassen G, Tanser P. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biull Eksp Biol Med. 1994 Oct;118(10):395-8. <strong> | |||
[CO2--a natural inhibitor of active oxygen form generation by phagocytes]</strong> Kogan AKh, Manuilov | |||
BM, Grachev SV, Bolevich S, Tsypin AB, Daniliak IG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Izv Akad Nauk Ser Biol. 1997 Mar-Apr;(2):204-17.<strong> | |||
[Carbon dioxide--a universal inhibitor of the generation of active oxygen forms by cells (deciphering | |||
one enigma of evolution)] | |||
</strong> | |||
Kogan AKh, Grachev SV, Eliseeva SV, Bolevich S. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vopr Med Khim. 1996 Jul-Sep;42(3):193-202.<strong> | |||
[Ability of carbon dioxide to inhibit generation of superoxide anion radical in cells and its biomedical | |||
role]</strong> Kogan AKh, Grachev SV, Eliseeva SV, Bolevich S. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Dokl Akad Nauk. 1996 May;348(3):413-6. <strong>[New evidence for the inhibitory action of CO2 on generation | |||
of superoxide anion radicals by phagocytes in various tissues. (Mechanism of bio- and eco-effects of | |||
CO2)] | |||
</strong>Kogan AKh, Grachev SV, Bolevich S, Eliseeva SV. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biull Eksp Biol Med. 1996 Apr;121(4):407-10. <strong>[Carbon dioxide gas inhibition of active forms of | |||
oxygen generation by cells in the internal organs and its biological significance]</strong> Kogan AKh, | |||
Grachev SV, Eliseeva SV. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Fiziol Cheloveka. 1995 Jul-Aug;21(4):128-36. <strong>[CO2--a natural inhibitor of the generation of active | |||
species of oxygen in phagocytes]</strong> Kogan AKh, Manuilov BM, Grachev SV, Bolevich S, Tsypin AB, | |||
Daniliak IG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Patol Fiziol Eksp Ter. 1995 Jul-Sep;(3):34-40. [Comparative study of the effect of carbon dioxide on | |||
the generation of active forms of oxygen by leukocytes in health and in bronchial asthma]</strong> Kogan | |||
AKh, Bolevich S, Daniliak IG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Can J Anaesth. 1999 Feb;46(2):185-9. <strong>Acute respiratory alkalosis associated with low minute | |||
ventilation in a patient with severe hypothyroidism.</strong> | |||
Lee HT, Levine M. <a href="mailto:Tl128@columbia.edu" target="_blank">Tl128@columbia.edu</a> PURPOSE: | |||
Patients with severe hypothyroidism present unique challenges to anesthesiologists and demonstrate much | |||
increased perioperative risks. Overall, they display increased sensitivity to anesthetics, higher incidence | |||
of perioperative cardiovascular morbidity, increased risks for postoperative ventilatory failure and other | |||
physiological derangements. The previously described physiological basis for the increased incidence of | |||
postoperative ventilatory failure in hypothyroid patients includes decreased central and peripheral | |||
ventilatory responses to hypercarbia and hypoxia, muscle weakness, depressed central respiratory drive, and | |||
resultant alveolar hypoventilation. These ventilatory failures are associated most frequently with severe | |||
hypoxia and carbon dioxide (CO2) retention. The purpose of this clinical report is to discuss an interesting | |||
and unique anesthetic presentation of a patient with severe hypothyroidism. CLINICAL FEATURES: We describe | |||
an unique presentation of ventilatory failure in a 58 yr old man with severe hypothyroidism. He had | |||
exceedingly low perioperative respiratory rate (3-4 bpm) and minute ventilation volume, and at the same time | |||
developed primary acute respiratory alkalosis and associated hypocarbia (P(ET)CO2 approximately 320-22 | |||
mmHg). CONCLUSION: Our patient's ventilatory failure was based on unacceptably low minute ventilation and | |||
respiratory rate that was unable to sustain adequate oxygenation. His profoundly lowered basal metabolic | |||
rate and decreased CO2 production, resulting probably from severe hypothyroidism, may have resulted in | |||
development of acute respiratory alkalosis in spite of concurrently diminished minute ventilation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Anal Bioanal Chem. 2008 Jan;390(2):679-88. Epub 2007 Oct 27. <strong>The structural modification of DNA | |||
nucleosides by nonenzymatic glycation: an in vitro study based on the reactions of glyoxal and | |||
methylglyoxal with 2'-deoxyguanosine.</strong> | |||
Li Y, Cohenford MA, Dutta U, Dain JA. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biull Eksp Biol Med. 1995 Jun;119(6):590-3. <strong>[Adaptation to high altitude hypoxia facilitates a | |||
limitation of lipid peroxidation activation in inflammation and stress] [Article in Russian] | |||
</strong> | |||
Malyshev VV, Vasil'eva LS, Belogorov SB, Nefedova TV. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2007 Sep;293(3):R1159-68. Epub 2007 Jun 20. <strong | |||
>Denervation-induced skeletal muscle atrophy is associated with increased mitochondrial ROS | |||
production.</strong> Muller FL, Song W, Jang YC, Liu Y, Sabia M, Richardson A, Van Remmen H. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Radiobiologiia. 1984 Jan-Feb;24(1):29-34. <strong>[Enzyme activity of glutamic acid metabolism and the Krebs | |||
cycle in the brain of rats laser-irradiated against a background of altered adrenoreceptor function] | |||
[Article in Russian] | |||
</strong> | |||
Pikulev AT, Dzhugurian NA, Zyrianova TN, Lavrova VM, Mostovnikov VA. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rejuvenation Res.2007 Dec12; :18072884, <strong>Exploring Overlooked Natural Mitochondria-Rejuvenative | |||
Intervention: The Puzzle of Bowhead Whales and Naked Mole Rats. | |||
</strong> | |||
Prokopov A.F. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proceedings of the Japan Academy. Ser. B: Physical and Biological Sciences Vol.78, No.10(2002)pp.293-298. | |||
<strong>DNA methylation and Lamarckian inheritance, </strong> | |||
Sano H. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biol Chem. 2009 Nov;390(11):1145-53. <strong>The epigenetic bottleneck of neurodegenerative and psychiatric | |||
diseases. | |||
</strong>Sananbenesi F, Fischer A. The orchestrated expression of genes is essential for the development and | |||
survival of every organism. In addition to the role of transcription factors, the availability of genes for | |||
transcription is controlled by a series of proteins that regulate epigenetic chromatin remodeling. The two | |||
most studied epigenetic phenomena are DNA methylation and histone-tail modifications. Although a large body | |||
of literature implicates the deregulation of histone acetylation and DNA methylation with the pathogenesis | |||
of cancer, recently epigenetic mechanisms have also gained much attention in the neuroscientific community. | |||
In fact, a new field of research is rapidly emerging and there is now accumulating evidence that the | |||
molecular machinery that regulates histone acetylation and DNA methylation is intimately involved in | |||
synaptic plasticity and is essential for learning and memory. Importantly, dysfunction of epigenetic gene | |||
expression in the brain might be involved in neurodegenerative and psychiatric diseases. In particular, it | |||
was found that inhibition of histone deacetylases attenuates synaptic and neuronal loss in animal models for | |||
various neurodegenerative diseases and improves cognitive function. In this article, we will summarize | |||
recent data in the novel field of neuroepigenetics and discuss the question why epigenetic strategies are | |||
suitable therapeutic approaches for the treatment of brain diseases. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ukr Biokhim Zh 1994 Jan-Feb;66(1):109-12. <strong>[Protective effect of sodium bicarbonate in nitrite ion | |||
poisoning].</strong> Shugalei IV, L'vov SN, Baev VI, Tselinskii IV | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2000 Mar;161(3 Pt 1):891-8. <strong> | |||
Modulation of release of reactive oxygen species by the contracting diaphragm.</strong> | |||
Stofan DA, Callahan LA, DiMarco AF, Nethery DE, Supinski GS. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ecology: Vol. 50, No. 3, pp. 492-494. <strong>Carbon Dioxide Retention: A Mechanism of Ammonia Tolerance in | |||
Mammals.</strong> Studier EM and Fresquez AA. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sci Signal. 2009 Mar 31;2(64): pe17. <strong>Reversing DNA methylation: new insights from neuronal | |||
activity-induced Gadd45b in adult neurogenesis. | |||
</strong> | |||
Wu H, Sun YE. Neurogenesis in the adult mammalian brain involves activity-dependent expression of genes | |||
critical for the proliferation of progenitors and for neuronal maturation. A recent study suggests that the | |||
stress response gene Gadd45b (growth arrest and DNA-damage-inducible protein 45 beta) can be transiently | |||
induced by neuronal activity and may promote adult neurogenesis through dynamic DNA demethylation of | |||
specific gene promoters in adult hippocampus. These results provide evidence supporting the provocative | |||
ideas that active DNA demethylation may occur in postmitotic neurons and that DNA methylation-mediated | |||
dynamic epigenetic regulation is involved in regulating long-lasting changes in neural plasticity in | |||
mammalian brains. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Patol Fiziol Eksp Ter. 2005 Apr-Jun;(2):13-5. <strong>[The effect of the NMDA-receptor blocker MK-801 on | |||
sensitivity of the respiratory system to carbon dioxide]</strong> | |||
Tarakanov IA, Dymetska A, Tarasova NN. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Life Sci. 1997;61(5):523-35. <strong>Effect of acidotic challenges on local depolarizations evoked by | |||
N-methyl-D-aspartate in the rat striatum.</strong> Urenjak J, Zilkha E, Gotoh M, Obrenovitch TP. | |||
"Hypercapnia reduced NMDA-evoked responses in a concentration-dependent manner, with 7.5 and 15 % CO2 in the | |||
breathing mixture reducing the depolarization amplitude to 74 % and 64 % of that of the initial stimuli, | |||
respectively. Application of 50 mM NH4+ progressively reduced dialysate pH, and a further acidification was | |||
observed when NH4+ was discontinued. Perfusion of NMDA after NH4+ application evoked smaller depolarizations | |||
(56 % of the corresponding control, 5 min after NH4+ removal), and this effect persisted for over 1 h." | |||
"Together, these results demonstrate that extracellular acidosis, such as that associated with excessive | |||
neuronal activation or ischemia, inhibits NMDA-evoked responses in vivo." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Arch Int Physiol Biochim. 1977 Apr;85(2):295-304. <strong>Glutamate and glutamine in the brain of the | |||
neonatal rat during hypercapnia.</strong> Van Leuven F, Weyne J, Leusen I. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Pediatrics 1995 Jun;95(6):868-874. Carbon dioxide protects the perinatal brain from hypoxic-ischemic | |||
damage: an experimental study in the immature rat.</strong> Vannucci RC, Towfighi J, Heitjan DF, | |||
Brucklacher RM | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pediatr Res 1997 Jul;42(1):24-29. <strong>Effect of carbon dioxide on cerebral metabolism during | |||
hypoxia-ischemia in the immature rat. | |||
</strong> | |||
Vannucci RC, Brucklacher RM, Vannucci SJ | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sci. Signal., 31 March 2009 Vol. 2, Issue 64, p. pe17, <strong>Reversing DNA Methylation: New Insights from | |||
Neuronal Activity-Induced Gadd45b in Adult Neurogenesis</strong> | |||
Wu H, Sun YI | |||
</p> | |||
Copyright 2011. Raymond Peat, P.O. Box 5764, Eugene OR 97405. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.comNot for | |||
republication without written permission. | |||
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<h1></h1> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<h2> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span><strong>When energy fails: | |||
Edema, heart failure, hypertension, sarcopenia, etc. </strong></span></span></span> | |||
</h2> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>More than 100 years ago the idea of | |||
a morphogenetic field was proposed by A.G. Gurwitsch, as a way to explain the orderly movements | |||
of cells in embryos and growing tissues, and to understand the principles that cause cells to | |||
change appropriately when their location in the organism changes. For 30 years, the concept | |||
guided research in embryology, but also led to important discoveries in the biology of cancer, | |||
aging, wound repair, and other important areas. But by the late 1940s, a more abstract approach | |||
to biology, based on the gene doctrine of Mendel and Weismann, took charge of academic and | |||
governmental biological research. This ideology at first said that organisms are determined by | |||
unchanging units of inheritance, "genes," and later when genes were found to be susceptible to | |||
mutation, the changes were said to be always random. The Central Dogma of the ideology was that | |||
any meaningful, adaptive changes that occur in an organism can't influence the genes. For many | |||
years, adaptive changes were said to be nothing but changes in the size or function of existing | |||
cells, because the cells of the major organs of the body were supposed to be created before | |||
birth, or in infancy. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Besides the purely ideological | |||
commitment to the theory of genes, there were other influences that contributed to the culture | |||
of Molecular Biology. People learned histology from slides or pictures made by killing, | |||
hardening, dehydrating, and slicing parts of organisms. Biochemists studied the chemistry of | |||
life mainly by grinding cells or tissues, and extracting water soluble materials to study the | |||
actions of enzymes on various materials. These unrealistic artifacts filled the textbooks and | |||
the minds of generations of biologists and physicians. The culture of molecular biology used | |||
these artifacts to create theories of embryology and physiology, and holistic ideas such as the | |||
developmental field were disregarded.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The mental image of a living | |||
organism that has been created by that culture is simply wrong. The concept of a developmental | |||
field is essential for understanding embryology, because things that exist on a scale bigger | |||
than molecules and cells govern the functions of the molecules and cells, and the principles of | |||
embryology don't arbitrarily stop operating at birth, but can be seen to continue operating | |||
during maturity and aging. The interactions of cells with their environment are different at | |||
different stages of life, but there are commonalities that are extremely important.</span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The processes that govern the | |||
pregnant woman's blood circulation, in sustaining the development of a fetus, are very similar | |||
to the processes that govern anyone's blood circulation, providing for the maintenance and | |||
renewal of all the body's organs. The common problems of pregnancy involving the circulatory | |||
system can provide insights into the problems of the various organs that have been the focus of | |||
the medical specialties, and to some basic medical issues, including aging, obesity, and | |||
inflammation.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The development of a fertilized egg | |||
into an embryo consumes energy at a very high rate, and the way the embryo develops depends on a | |||
continuously adequate supply of oxygen and sugar, and other nutrients. The intense flow of | |||
energy through each stage of a developing structure shapes the following stage. The necessary | |||
energy and materials are provided abundantly by the mother's blood. When the development has | |||
advanced far enough to make life possible outside the uterus, energy will be used more slowly, | |||
for growth, maintenance, and renewal of tissues. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Failure to renew cells and tissues | |||
leads to the loss of function and substance. Bones and muscles get weaker and smaller with | |||
aging. Diminished bone substance, osteopenia, is paralleled, at roughly the same rate, by the | |||
progressive loss of muscle mass, sarcopenia (or myopenia). The structure of aging tissue | |||
changes, with collagen tending to fill the spaces left by the disappearing cells. It's also | |||
common for fat cells to increase, as muscle cells disappear.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>When conditions are ideal, as during | |||
healthy development in the uterus, tissue damage is corrected by the multiplication of cells to | |||
replace any that were lost. But when conditions are less perfect, injuries are imperfectly | |||
repaired, usually with highly collagenous scar tissue bridging the area that was destroyed. | |||
During this imperfect repair, there is inflammation, which apparently exists to the extent that | |||
the substances needed for regeneration are lacking. For example, when oxygen is lacking, lactic | |||
acid is likely to be produced, along with increases of pro-inflammatory regulators such as | |||
histamine and serotonin, leading to the loss of many important proteins and functions, and the | |||
over-production of collagen instead.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Since cellular renewal of tissues, | |||
in a healthy individual, is a constant process, we can think of the metabolic rate of a healthy | |||
adult as just what is needed to sustain this constant, limited sort of regeneration, but not | |||
quite intense enough to produce scarless healing of a wound (without special | |||
intervention).</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>If something reduces the systemic | |||
ability to produce energy, there will be a gap between the available energy and the energy | |||
needed for the constant turnover of cells in each tissue and organ, and a generalized | |||
inflammation will develop. The replacement of cells will be slowed, and the organism will | |||
mobilize the processes used for producing scar tissue, producing an excess of collagen, filling | |||
the spaces left by the lost cells.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>We are susceptible to many things | |||
that interfere with energy production---the substitution of iron for copper in the respiratory | |||
enzyme, the absorption of endotoxin, the accumulation of PUFA, a deficiency of thyroid hormone, | |||
the formation of increased amounts of nitric oxide, serotonin, and histamine, etc. Different | |||
environments will condition the way the defensive mechanisms of inflammation are | |||
produced. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Toxemia of pregnancy, or | |||
preeclampsia, is a state of generalized inflammation, and some of the causes and remedies are | |||
known. Despite the predominance of crazy genetic theories of preeclampsia in 20th century | |||
medical literature, there was clear evidence (reviewed by Tom Brewer, Douglas Shanklin, and Jay | |||
Hodin) that it was caused by malnutrition, and that it could be cured by adequate protein, salt, | |||
and calcium. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The old medical practice of | |||
restricting salt intake during pregnancy was an important factor in causing it, so it's | |||
interesting to look at the effects of salt restriction as a treatment for hypertension.</span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The pregnant woman's blood volume | |||
expands, to permit the supply of energy to match the needs of the embryo. If the blood volume | |||
doesn't increase, or if it decreases, as in pregnancy toxemia, her blood pressure will increase. | |||
Typically, the decrease of blood volume is accompanied by an increase in the extracellular | |||
fluid, edema, resulting from leakage of fluid through the walls of the capillaries, and albumin | |||
appears in the urine as it leaks through the capillaries in the kidneys. The amount of blood | |||
pumped by the heart, however, is increased in toxemia (Hamilton, 1952), showing that the | |||
increased blood pressure is at least partially compensating for the smaller volume of | |||
blood. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>A similar situation, <strong | |||
>reduced blood volume and edema, can be seen (Tarazi, 1976) in "essential hypertension," the | |||
"unexplained" hi</strong>gh blood pressure that occurs more often with increasing age and | |||
obesity. At the beginning of "essential hypertension," the amount of blood pumped is usually | |||
greater than normal.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>In both situations, preeclampsia and | |||
essential hypertension, there is an increased amount of aldosterone, an adrenal steroid which | |||
allows the kidneys to retain sodium, and to lose potassium and ammonium instead. A restriction | |||
of salt in the diet causes more aldosterone to be produced, and increased salt in the diet | |||
causes aldosterone to decrease. One effect of aldosterone is to increase the production of a | |||
substance called vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGF, or vascular permeability factor, | |||
which causes capillaries to become leaky, and causes new blood vessels to grow.</span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>While <strong>increased salt in | |||
the diet tends to lower both aldosterone and VEGF, reducing the leakiness of blood | |||
vessels, </strong>sodium also has a direct effect that tends to prevent the leakage of | |||
water and albumin out of the blood vessels, helping to maintain the blood volume which is needed | |||
to perfuse the kidneys, preventing them from producing signals to increase blood pressure and | |||
aldosterone. There is a large amount of albumin in the blood serum, and sodium ions associate | |||
with the negative electrical charges on the albumin molecule. This association causes the | |||
complex of albumin and sodium to attract a large amount of water, that is to exert osmotic or | |||
oncotic pressure. This oncotic pressure causes any excess extracellular water to be attracted | |||
into the blood vessels, preventing edema while maintaining the blood volume. When there is too | |||
little sodium, the albumin molecule itself easily leaves the blood stream along with the | |||
water.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Instead of considering the | |||
significance of sodium's effects on albumin, aldosterone, and VEGF, textbooks have often talked | |||
about the factors that "pump" sodium, and factors that specifically regulate the movement of | |||
water. Experiments in which an excess of aldosterone is combined with a high salt intake produce | |||
increased blood pressure, and--by invoking various genes--salt is said to cause hypertension in | |||
certain people. This reasoning is hardly different from the reasoning of the drug companies in | |||
the 1950s who said that since women with toxemia have hypertension and edema, they should be | |||
treated with a diuretic and a low salt diet, to eliminate water and to reduce blood | |||
pressure.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The physiological loss of sodium | |||
occurs when energy metabolism fails, as in<strong>diabetes, hypothyroidism, hyperestrogenism, | |||
and starvation. </strong>What these conditions have in common is an increased level of | |||
free fatty acids in the blood. Increased free fatty acids impair the use of glucose. The | |||
consumption of carbohydrate, like an increase of thyroid hormone, insulin, or progesterone, | |||
increases the retention of sodium; fructose is the most effective carbohydrate (Rebello, et al., | |||
1983). </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The loss of sodium is often | |||
accompanied by the retention of water, reducing the osmotic pressure of the body fluids. The | |||
leakiness of blood vessels allows the extracellular fluid volume to increase, as understood in | |||
the standard definition of edema. However, when this fluid is hypo-osmotic, it will enter cells, | |||
causing them to swell. Cell swelling excites cells (Ayus, et al., 2008; Baxter, et al., 1991), | |||
and can kill them if they are unable to produce enough energy to restore their original volume, | |||
by measures including the excretion of amino acids and potassium. Both low sodium | |||
(hyponatremia) and low osmotic pressure stimulate the adrenergic nervous system.</span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The increase of adrenalin,f caused | |||
by a deficiency of sodium, is one of the factors that can increase blood pressure; if the | |||
tissues's glycogen stores are depleted, the adrenalin will mobilize free fatty acids from the | |||
tissues, which tends to inhibit energy production from glucose, and to increase leakiness. After | |||
I had read Tom Brewer's work on preventing or curing preeclampsia with added salt, I realized | |||
that the premenstrual syndrome involved some of the features of preeclampsia (edema, insomnia, | |||
cramps, hypertension, salt craving), so I suggested to a friend that she might try salting her | |||
food to taste, instead of trying to restrict salt to "prevent edema." She immediately noticed | |||
that it prevented her monthly edema problem. For several years, all the women who tried it had | |||
similarly good results, and often mentioned that their sleep improved. I mentioned this to | |||
several people with sleep problems, and regardless of age, their sleep improved when they ate as | |||
much salt as they wanted. Around that time, several studies had shown that salt restriction | |||
increases adrenalin, and one study showed that most old people on a low sodium diet suffered | |||
from insomnia, and had unusually high adrenalin. When they ate a normal amount of salt, their | |||
adrenalin was normalized, and they slept better.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>It's very common for physicians who | |||
are aware of progesterone's "anti-aldosterone" activity to think that both estrogen and | |||
progesterone are responsible for the increased risk of sodium loss in women, especially during | |||
pregnancy, but Hans Selye demonstrated that progesterone will normalize sodium retention even | |||
when there is no aldosterone at all, following removal of the adrenal glands. It is estrogen | |||
which is responsible for the dangerous loss of sodium. </span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The ratio of estrogen to | |||
progesterone--regardless of age or gender--is an important factor in regulating minerals and | |||
water, cell energy metabolism, and blood pressure. The ratios of many other regulatory | |||
substances (including serotonin/dopamine, glucagon/insulin, and | |||
aldosterone/cortisol+progesterone) vary according to the quality of the individual's level of | |||
adaptation to the environment. Improving the environment can shift the ratio in the direction of | |||
restoration, rather than mere survival.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Gershom Zajicek and his colleagues | |||
have demonstrated an organized renewal of tissues, in which new cells are born with the division | |||
of stem cells, and "stream" away from their origin as they mature, and finally are shed or | |||
dissolved. A few studies have demonstrated a similar kind of migration of new cells in the brain | |||
(Eriksson, et al., 1998; Gould, et al., 1999), a process which differs by the absence of | |||
systematic dissolution of mature brain cells. While Zajicek has demonstrated the conversion of | |||
one kind of cell, such as a pancreatic ductal epithelial or acinar cell into insulin-secreting | |||
beta cells, other researchers have shown that after injury to the pancreas beta cells can be | |||
formed from glucagon-secreting alpha cells, as well as from other beta cells. </span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Stress, increasing the need for | |||
energy, increases the formation of cortisol and free fatty acids when glucose isn't available, | |||
and those--while they provide alternative sources of energy--interfere with the ability to | |||
produce energy from glucose. Free fatty acids and cortisol can cause the insulin-secreting beta | |||
cells to die. Glucose, and insulin which allows glucose to be used for energy production, while | |||
it lowers the formation of free fatty acids, promotes the regeneration of the beta-cells. | |||
Although several research groups have demonstrated the important role of glucose in regeneration | |||
of the pancreas, and many other groups have demonstrated the destructive effect of free fatty | |||
acids on the beta cells, the mainstream medical culture still claims that "sugar causes | |||
diabetes."</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>In the adrenal glands, renewing | |||
cells stream from the capsule on the surface of the gland toward the center of the gland. The | |||
first cells to be produced in a regenerating gland are those that produce aldosterone, the next | |||
in the stream are the cortisol producing cells, and the last to be formed are the cells that | |||
produce the sex hormones, the androgens including DHEA, and progesterone. In aging, after the | |||
age of thirty, the renewal slows, but the dissolution of the sex hormone zone continues, so the | |||
proportion shifts, increasing the ratio of the aldosterone and cortisol producing cells to the | |||
layer that produces the protective androgens and progesterone (Parker, et al., 1997).</span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Even before aldosterone was | |||
identified, progesterone's role in regulating the salts, water, and energy metabolism was known, | |||
and after the functions of aldosterone were identified, progesterone was found to protect | |||
against its harmful effects, as it protects against an excess of cortisol, estrogen, or the | |||
androgens. New anti-aldosterone drugs are available that are effective for treating hypertension | |||
and heart failure, and their similarity to progesterone is recognized.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>While stress typically causes the | |||
adrenal glands to produce cortisol, extreme stress, as described by Hans Selye, damages the | |||
adrenal cortex, and can cause the cells to die, leading to the death of the animal. There is | |||
evidence that it is the breakdown of unsaturated fatty acids that causes damage to the adrenal | |||
cortex in extreme stress. Although many factors influence the production of the adrenal | |||
steroids, arachidonic acid, even without being converted to prostaglandins, is an important | |||
activator of aldosterone synthesis. Adrenalin, produced in response to a lack of glucose, | |||
liberates free fatty acids from the tissues, so when the tissues contain large amounts of the | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids, the production of aldosterone will be greater than it would be | |||
otherwise. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The continuing accumulation of | |||
polyunsaturated fats in the tissues is undoubtedly important in the changing relationship | |||
between the pancreas and the adrenal glands in aging. Aspirin, which is antilipolytic, | |||
decreasing the release of free fatty acids, as well as inhibiting their conversion to | |||
prostaglandins, lowers the production of stress-induced aldosterone, and helps to lower blood | |||
pressure, if it's taken in the evening, to prevent the increase of free fatty acids during the | |||
night. Aspirin increases insulin sensitivity. A low salt diet increases the free fatty acids, | |||
leading to insulin resistance, increasing free fatty acids in the blood, and contributing to | |||
atherosclerosis (Prada, et al., 2000; Mrnka, et al., 2000; Catanozi, et al., 2003; Garg, et al., | |||
2011).</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>The same factors that support or | |||
interfere with cellular renewal in the pancreas and adrenal glands have similar effects in the | |||
bones, skin, skeletal and heart muscle, nervous system, liver, and other organs. In every case, | |||
the local circulation of blood is influenced by both local and systemic factors. The loss of | |||
control over the water in the body is the result of energy failure, and hypertension is one of | |||
the adaptations that helps to preserve or restore energy production. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: Helvetica"><span>Lowering inflammation and the | |||
associated excess of free fatty acids in the blood, and improving the ability to oxidize | |||
glucose, will lower blood pressure while improving tissue renewal, but lowering blood pressure | |||
without improving energy production and use will create new problems or intensify existing | |||
problems. After 40 years the medical profession quietly retreated from their catastrophic | |||
approach to pregnancy toxemia, but in the more general problem of essential hypertension, the | |||
mistaken ideology is being preserved, even as less harmful treatments are introduced. That | |||
ideology prevents a comprehensive and rational approach to the problems of stress and | |||
aging.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> | |||
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<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2013. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Epilepsy and Progesterone</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Epilepsy and Progesterone | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
The length of the life-span, and of the period of youth or immaturity, is closely associated with the size | |||
of the brain, and the brain has a very high rate of metabolism. When something interferes with this very | |||
high metabolic rate, the consequences may be instantanteous,* or developmental, or chronic and degenerative, | |||
or even transgenerational. The issue of epilepsy centers on questions of brain metabolism, and so it has all | |||
of those dimensions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As I discuss the mechanisms known to predispose a person to epilepsy, I will emphasize the centrality of | |||
oxidative energy production, and show how "stroke," "stress," "hyperactivity," "dementia," and other brain | |||
syndromes are related to "epilepsy." (Similar processes are being studied in the heart and other tissues; | |||
eventually, we might have a general language that will make it easier to understand the parallels in the | |||
various kinds of "seizure" in any organ.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As an old term, "epilepsy" has aquired a burden of pseudoscientific ideas, covering old superstitions with | |||
an overlay of new superstitions. [Hereditary epilepsy has been discussed in countless textbooks and medical | |||
journals, but I think a much better case could be made for the inheritance of a tendency to offer stupid | |||
genetic explanations.] "Hereditary epilepsy" and "idiopathic epilepsy" are seriously pathogenic terms; | |||
"brain scar" sometimes has a factual basis, but most often the term is an evasion of understanding. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As long as we realize that the essential meaning of the word is "something that grabs you," "epilepsy" is a | |||
convenient way to refer to a cluster of convulsive states, fainting spells, night-terrors and nightmares, | |||
and strange sensations. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Seizures can be caused by lack of glucose, lack of oxygen, vitamin B6 deficiency, and magnesium deficiency. | |||
They are more likely to occur during the night, during puberty, premenstrually, during pregnancy, during the | |||
first year of life, and can be triggered by hyperventilation, running, strong emotions, or unusual sensory | |||
stimulation. Water retention and low sodium increase susceptibility to seizures. When I was in high school, | |||
our dog found and ate a pint of bacon grease, and shortly afterward had a convulsive seizure. I knew of | |||
veterinarians who treated seizures in dogs with a vermifuge, so it seemed obvious that a metabolic | |||
disturbance, especially if combined with intestinal irritation, could cause fits. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It was undoubtedly such observations that led some physicians to advocate removal of the colon as treatment | |||
for epilepsy. Pregnancy and the menstrual cycle have been recognized as having something to do with | |||
seizures, but when seizures occurred only during pregnancy, they were classified as nonepileptic, and when | |||
they had a clear premenstrual occurrence, they were likely to be classified as "hysterical fits," to be | |||
treated with punishment. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It has been observed that all "recognized" anti-seizure drugs are teratogenic, and women who are taking such | |||
drugs are told that pregnancy might kill them if they stop the drug, but that their babies will have a | |||
greatly increased risk of birth defects if they take the drugs during pregnancy. This is why a better | |||
understanding of epilepsy is very important. Old therapies are mainly important for the insight they can | |||
give into the nature of the physiological problem. Some of the well established clinical-laboratory | |||
observations (F. Mora, and C. S. Babel, for example) give strong hints as to the physiological problem, for | |||
example, low albumin, high prealbumin, low magnesium and high calcium all suggest hypothyroidism. (Problems | |||
with the bowel, liver, and sex hormones are highly associated with hypothyroidism, both as causes and as | |||
effects.) Water retention was so clearly involved in seizures that increased water intake was used as a | |||
diagnostic procedure. (R. Grinker) Unfortunately, animal experiments showed that water intoxication | |||
increased susceptibility to seizures even in normal individuals. Low sodium content in the body fluids also | |||
predisposed to seizures, so that someone with hyponatremia (low blood sodium) would be more susceptible to | |||
induction of a seizure by excessive water intake. (Excessive water uptake is still recognized as a factor in | |||
seizures, but now it is seen as part of a complex process, involving energy, hormones, and transmitter | |||
substances. E.g., Kempski; Chan.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hypothyroid people tend to lose sodium easily, and unopposed estrogen increases water retention, without an | |||
equivalent sodium retention, so low thyroid, high estrogen people have two of the conditions (edema and | |||
hyponatremia) known to predispose to seizures. Another outstanding feature of seizures of various sorts is | |||
that they are most likely to occur at night, especially in the early pre-dawn hours. Low blood sugar and | |||
high adrenalin predominate during those hours. Hypoglycemia, in itself, like oxygen deprivation, is enough | |||
to cause convulsions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Progesterone and thyroid promote normal energy production, and their deficiency causes a tendency toward | |||
hypoglycemia, edema and instability of nerves. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Twenty years ago, a woman who was considered demented visited me. From the age of 21, she had been | |||
increasingly disabled by premenstrual migraines. When she was 35 she was a school teacher, and during the | |||
summer a neurologist told her that dilantin would help her headaches, because "migraine is similar to | |||
epilepsy." Although she told the neurologist that the drug made her "too stupid to teach school," he offered | |||
her no alternatives, and didn't mention that sudden withdrawal from the drug could trigger a seizure. When | |||
classes started she discontinued the dilantin and had a seizure. The neurologist said the seizure proved | |||
that migraines were a form of epilepsy. At the age of 52, she spent about 20 hours a day in bed, and | |||
couldn't go outside by herself, because she would get lost. After using a little progesterone for a few | |||
days, she stopped having seizures, discontinued her drugs, and was able to work. When she returned to | |||
graduate school, she got straight As, and earned her masters' degree in gerontology. But she had lost 17 | |||
years because the drug industry had covered up the role of the hormones in epilepsy, migraine, and the | |||
perimenstrual syndrome. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The most popular anticonvulsant drugs are both neurotoxic and teratogenic, that is, they damage the | |||
patient's brain, and greatly increase the incidence of birth defects. The Nazis justified their horrible | |||
medical experiments as "science," but the effects of epilepsy medicine in the last half century have been | |||
similar in effect, grander in scale, and without any scientific justification. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides the specific promotional efforts of the drug industry and their branch of government, there is a | |||
broader situation that makes their work easier. It is a culture of goony ideas, that ultimately emanates | |||
from the academic elite, which (since Descartes, and before) places "thought" above evidence. In biology, | |||
"genes" and "membranes" are confused ideas that are used to justify actions that aren't based on evidence. | |||
For the Nazis, "cultural degeneracy" was a medical-biological-political category based on that style of | |||
thinking. In the United States, "genes" for epilepsy, hyperactivity, language development, IQ, eclampsia, | |||
etc., are "found" at Harvard/MIT/Stan- ford/Yale/Univ. of California, etc., by an elite whose wits have been | |||
dulled by environmental deprivation, that is, by a lack of criticism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By manipulating the diet and environment, animals can be made more or less seizure-prone, and it happens | |||
that the changes that affect the brain affect all other organs, in ways that are now fairly well understood. | |||
Examining the cellular events associated with a seizure is useful for therapy and prevention of seizures, | |||
but the same methods are helpful for many other conditions. It is now clearly established that stress can | |||
cause brain damage, as well as other diseases. Now that our public health establishment has eliminated | |||
smoking from public places, maybe they can find a way to reduce stress and disease by removing morons from | |||
positions of power. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Excitotoxicity, in its simplest sense, is the harmful cellular effect (death or injury) caused by an | |||
excitatory transmitter such as glutamate or aspartate acting on a cell whose energetic reserves aren't | |||
adequate to sustain the level of activity provoked by the transmitter. Once an excitotoxic state exists, the | |||
consequences of cell exhaustion can increase the likelihood that the condition will spread to other cells, | |||
since any excitation can trigger a complex of other excitatory processes. As calcium enters cells, potassium | |||
leaves, and enzymes are activated, producing free fatty acids (linoleic and arachidonic, for example) and | |||
prostaglandins, which activate other processes, including lipid peroxidation and free radical production. | |||
Protein kinase C (promoted by unsaturated fats and estrogen) facilitates the release of excitatory amino | |||
acids. (See J. W. Phillis and M. H. O'Regan, "Mechanisms of glutamate and aspartate release in the ischemic | |||
rat cerebral cortex," Br. Res. 730(1-2), 150-164, 1996.) Estrogen supports acetylcholine release, which | |||
leads to increased extracellular potassium and excitatory amino acids. (See R. B. Gibbs, et al., "Effects of | |||
estrogen on potassium-stimulated acetylcholine release in the hippocampus and overlying cortex of adult | |||
rats," Br. Res. 749(1), 143-146, 1997.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen also stimulates the production of free radicals. Calcium, free radicals, and unsaturated free fatty | |||
acids impair energy production, decreasing the ability to regulate potassium and calcium. The increased | |||
estrogen associated with seizures is associated with reduced serum calcium (Jacono and Robertson, 1987). | |||
Feedback self-stimulation of free radicals, free fatty acids, and prostaglandins create a bias toward | |||
increased excitation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ammonia is produced by stimulated nerves, and normally its elimination helps to eliminate and control the | |||
excitotoxic amino acids, glutamate and aspartate. The production of urea consumes aspartic acid, converting | |||
it to fumaric acid, but this requires carbon dioxide, produced by normal mitochondrial function. A | |||
deficiency of carbon dioxide would reduce the delivery of oxygen to the brain by constricting blood vessels | |||
and changing hemoglobin's affinity for oxygen (limiting carbon dioxide production), and the failure to | |||
consume aspartate (in urea synthesis) and glutamate (as alpha-ketoglutarate) and aspartate (as oxaloacetate) | |||
in the Krebs cycle, means that as energy becomes deficient, excitation tends to be promoted. This helps to | |||
explain the fact that seizures can be induced by hypoxia. (Balloonists and mountain climbers at extremely | |||
high elevations have mentioned suffering from severe insomnia. The mechanisms of excitotoxicity are probably | |||
involved in other forms of insomnia, too.) Antioxidants help to control seizures, by reducing the excitatory | |||
contribution of free radicals and lipid peroxidation. Since excitation can promote the toxic forms of | |||
oxidation, many surprising substances turn out to have an "antioxidant" function. Magnesium, sodium | |||
(balancing calcium and potassium), thyroid and progesterone (increasing energy production), and in some | |||
situations, carbon dioxide. Aspirin, by inhibiting prostaglandin synthesis (and maybe other mechanisms) | |||
often lowers free radical production. Adenosine seems to have a variety of antioxidant functions, and one | |||
mechanism seems to be its function as an antiexcitatory transmitter. One of estrogen's excitant actions on | |||
the brain probably involves its antagonism to adenosine (Phillis and O'Regan, 1988). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Albumin, besides maintaining blood volume and preventing edema, serves to protect respiration, by binding | |||
free fatty acids. Estrogen blocks the liver's ability to produce albumin, and increases the level of | |||
circulating free fatty acids. Free fatty acids cause brain edema. This is probably another aspect of | |||
estrogen's contribution to seizure susceptibility. Magnesium sulfate has been used for generations in India | |||
to treat eclampsia and "toxemia" of pregnancy, and its effectiveness is gradually coming to be recognized in | |||
the U.S. Increasingly, magnesium deficiency is recognized as a factor that increases susceptibility to | |||
seizures. (Valenzuela and Benardo, 1995; Slandley, et al., 1995). Hypothyroidism reduces the ability of | |||
cells to retain magnesium. Thyroid does many things to protect against seizures. It keeps estrogen and | |||
adrenal hormones low, and increases production of progesterone and pregnenolone. It facilitates retention of | |||
magnesium and of sodium, and prevents edema in a variety of ways. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Progesterone, because of its normal anesthetic function (which prevents the pain of childbirth when its | |||
level is adequate), directly quiets nerves, and in this way suppresses many of the excitotoxic processes. It | |||
has direct effects on mitochondria, promoting energy production, and it facilitates thyroid hormone | |||
functions in various ways. It promotes the elimination of estrogen from tissues, and is a "diuretic" in | |||
several benign ways, that are compatible with maintenance of blood volume. It antagonizes the | |||
mineralocorticoids and the glucocorticoids, both of which promote seizures. (Roberts and Keith, 1995.) The | |||
combination of hypoglycemia with elevation of cortisone probably accounts for the nocturnal incidence of | |||
seizures. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If progesterone's antiepileptic effectiveness were not enough (and it is very effective even in irrational | |||
pharmaceutical formulations), the fact that it reduces birth defects, and promotes brain development and | |||
nerve repair should assure its general use in women with a history of seizures, until it is established that | |||
they are no longer "epileptic." Although thyroid, progesterone, and a high quality protein diet will | |||
generally correct the epilepsy problem, it is important to mention that the involvement of unsaturated fats | |||
and free radicals in seizure physiology implies that we should minimize our consumption of the unsaturated | |||
fats. Even years after eliminating them from the diet, their release from tissue storage can prolong the | |||
problem, and during that time the use of vitamin E is likely to reduce the intensity and frequency of | |||
seizures. Coconut oil lowers the requirement for vitamin E, and reduces the toxicity of the unsaturated fats | |||
(see Cleland, et al.), favoring effective respiration and improving thyroid and progesterone production. | |||
Endotoxin formed in the bowel can block respiration and cause hormone imbalances contributing to instability | |||
of the nerves, so it is helpful to optimize bowel flora, for example with a carrot salad; a dressing of | |||
vinegar, coconut oil and olive oil, carried into the intestine by the carrot fiber, suppresses bacterial | |||
growth while stimulating healing of the wall of the intestine. The carrot salad improves the ratio of | |||
progesterone to estrogen and cortisol, and so is as appropriate for epilepsy as for premenstrual syndrome, | |||
insomnia, or arthritis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p>NOTES:</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When the brain loses its oxygen supply, consciousness is lost immediately, before there is much decrease in | |||
the ATP concentration. This has led to the proposal of interesting "electronic" ideas of consciousness, but | |||
there is another way of viewing this. While ATP constitutes a kind of reservoir of cellular energy, the flow | |||
of carbon dioxide through the brain cell is almost the mirror image of the flow of oxygen. Oxygen scarcity | |||
leads directly to carbon dioxide scarcity. The "sensitive state," consciousness, might require the presence | |||
of carbon dioxide as well as ATP, to sustain a cooperative, semi-stable, state of the cytoplasmic proteins. | |||
The ability of ordinary light to trigger a conformation change in the hemoglobin-carbon monoxide-carbon | |||
dioxide system shows how sensitive a system with only a few elements can be. At the other extreme from | |||
consciousness, there is the evidence that carbon dioxide is essential for even the growing/living state of | |||
protozoa, algae, and bacteria.(O. Rahn, 1941.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
O. Rahn, "Protozoa need carbon dioxide for growth," Growth 5, 197-199, 1941. "On page 113 of this volume, | |||
the statement of Valley and Rettger that all bacteria need carbon dioxide for growth had been shown to apply | |||
to young as well as old cells." "...it is possible...to remove it as rapidly as it is produced, and under | |||
these circumstances, bacteria cannot multiply." | |||
</p> | |||
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<p> | |||
E. Tauboll, et al., "The progesterone metabolite 5-alpha-pregnan-3-alpha-ol-20-one reduces K+-induced GABA | |||
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</p> | |||
<p> | |||
E. Tauboll and S. Lindstrom, similar article in Epilepsy Research 14(1), 17-30, 1993. | |||
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<p> | |||
G. K. Herkes, et al., "Patterns of seizure occurrence in catamenial epilepsy," Epilepsy Research 15(1), | |||
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</p> | |||
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M. S. Myslobodsky, "Proconvulsant and anticonvulsant effects of stress--the role of neuroactive steroids," | |||
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P. Berbel, et al., "Organization of auditory callosal connections in hypothyroid adult rats," European J. of | |||
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</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. O. McNamara, "Human hypoxia and seizures: Effects and interactions," Advances in Neurology 26, S. Fahn, | |||
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<p> | |||
J. W. Phillis and M. H. O'Regan, "Effects of estradiol on cerebral cortex neurons and their responses to | |||
adenosine," Br. Res. Bull. 20(2), 151-155, 1966. (Antagonism to endogenous adenosine may account for the | |||
excitant actions of estradiol in the brain.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. W. Phillis, et al., "Acetylcholine output from the ischemic rat cerebral cortex: Effects of adenosine | |||
agonists," Br. Res. 613(2), 337-340, 1993. (Acetylcholine enhances excitotoxicity, could contribute to | |||
ischemic brain injury.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
T. Backstrom, "Epileptic seizures in women related to plasma estrogen and progesterone during the menstrual | |||
cycle," Acta Neurol. Scand. 54, 321-347, 1976. (Seizures are more frequent at menstruation and ovulation.) | |||
T. Backstrom, et al., "Effects of intravenous progesterone infusion on the epilepsy discharge frequency in | |||
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<p> | |||
A. W. Zimmerman, "Hormones and epilepsy," Neurol. Clin. 4(4), 853-861, 1985. "Progesterone appears to be | |||
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<p> | |||
G. K. Herkes, "Drug treatment of catamenial epilepsy," CNS Drugs 3(4), 260-266, 1995. (Mentions use of | |||
diuretics, progesterone, and the very high incidence of premenstrucal seizure, and of abnormal menstrual | |||
cycles in women with epilepsy.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
E. Spiegel and H. Wycis, "Anticonvulsant effects of steroids," J. Lab. Clin. Med. 33, 945-957, 1947. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
G. Holmes, "Anticonvulsant effect of hormones on seizures in animals," 265-268, in: R. Porter, R. H. | |||
Mattson, A. Ward, and M. Dam, eds., Advances in Epileptology, 15th Epilepsy International Symposium, New | |||
York, Raven Press, 1984. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
H. W. Zimmerman, et al., "Medroxyprogesterone acetate in the treatment of seizures associated with | |||
menstruation," J. Pediatr. 83, 959-963, 1973. R. H. Mattson, et al., "Medroxy-progesterone treatment of | |||
women with uncontrolled seizures," Epilepsia 22, 242, 1981. A. Rosenfield, et al., "The Food and Drug | |||
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F. Hill, Chapter 43, in Antiepileptic Drugs: Mechanisms of Action, ed. by G. H. Glaser, et al, Raven Press, | |||
N.Y., 1980. (Estrogens increase cortical excitability, lower convulsive thresholds, and are clearly | |||
associated with certain cases of petit mal epilepsy. "The mechanisms of this so-called 'catamenial' epilepsy | |||
are unknown. Water retention and electrolyte changes in the brain...have been implicated..." | |||
"...acetazolamide (diamox), a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor and diuretic, is successful in the treatment of | |||
many cases of these seizures, and in refractory cases progestational agents are effective." "...seizures | |||
were more severe and frequent during the estrogen-dominated preovulatory phase of the menstrual cycle than | |||
in the progesterone-dominated postovulatory phase." "...ACTH may trigger epileptic convulsions by increasing | |||
intracellular sodium concentration throughout the body." "Progesterone can effectively reduce the frequency | |||
and severity of intractable seizures associated with menstruation..." "Considering the markedly | |||
proconvulsant effects of estrogens, it is surprising that the differential effects of sex hormones on | |||
central neurotransmitter mechanisms have been only sparingly investigated." "...estradiol decreases | |||
monoamine oxidase activity and increases choline acetyltransferase activity in various brain regions." | |||
"...hypothyroidism in perinatal animals has striking suppressant effects on GABA metabolism and also causes | |||
a persistent lowering of electroconvulsive threshold.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
P. S. Timiras and H. F. Hill, "Antiepileptic drugs," Chapter 43; E. Roberts, "Epilepsy and antiepileptic | |||
drugs: A speculative synthesis," Chapter 44, in Antiepileptic Drugs: Mechanisms of Action, ed. by G. H. | |||
Glaser, et al., Raven Press, New York, 1980. E. V. Nikushkin, et al.,"Relationship between peroxidation and | |||
phospholipase hydrolysis of lipids in synaptosomes," B.E.B.M.107(2)183-186, 1989. Free unsaturated fatty | |||
acids are liberated in nerve endings and contribute to lipid peroxidation in epileptic seizures. P. A. Long, | |||
et al., "Importance of abnormal glucose tolerance (hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia) in the aetiology of | |||
pre-eclampsia," Lancet 1, 923-925, 1977. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. M. Singh, "Carbohydrate metabolism in pre-eclampsia," Br. J. Obstet. Gynaecol. 83, 124-131, 1976. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
N. A. Ziboh, et al., Prostaglandins 5, 233, 1974. (Eicosatrienoic (20:3 n-9) acid is a potent inhibitor of | |||
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ischaemia in essential fatty acid-deficient rats," J. of Neurochemistry 26, 401-404, 1976. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
B. Meldrum, "Excitatory amino acids and anoxic-ischemic brain damage," Trends Neurosci. 8, 47-48, 1985. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
B. Halliwell, "Oxidants and human disease: Some new concepts," FASEB J. 1, 358-364, 1987. "...injury to the | |||
brain causes release of metal ions that stimulate lipid peroxidation." "..lipid peroxidation...could be | |||
important in spreading injury to adjacent cells...." P.H. Chan, et al., "Effects of excitatory | |||
neurotransmitter amino acids on swelling of rat brain cortical slices," J. Neurochem. 33, 1309, 1979. P. H. | |||
Chan and R. A. Fishman, "Alterations of membrane integrity and cellular constituents by arachidonic acid in | |||
neuroblastoma and glioma cells," Brain Res. 248, 151, 1982. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
T. O. Kokate, et al., "Neuroactive steroids protect against pilocarpine- and kainic acid-induced limbic | |||
seizures and status epilepticus in mice," Neuropharmacology 35(8), 1049-1056, 1996. (With a second dose, | |||
"complete protection from the...limbic seizures and status epilepticus was obtained.") J. W. Phillis, et | |||
al., "Effect of adenosine receptor agonist on spontaneous and K+-evoked acetylcholine release from the in | |||
vivo rat cerebral cortex," Brain Res. 605(2), 293-297, 1993. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. W. Phillis, et al., "Acetylcholine output from the ischemic rat cerebral cortex: Effectss of adenosine | |||
agonists," Brain Res. 613(2), 337-340, 1993. (Acetylcholine enhances excitotoxic depolarization, | |||
intracellular calcium levels, and neural degeneration, and could contribute to ischemic brain injury. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
R. L. Grief, "Thyroid status influences calcium ion accumulation and retention by rat liver mitochondria," | |||
Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. & Med. 189(1), 39-44, 1988. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
L. G. Cleland, et al., "Effects of dietary n-9 eicosatrienoic acid on the fatty acid composition of plasma | |||
lipid fractions and tissue plasma lipids," Lipids 31(8), 829-837, 1996. "Dietary enrichment with ETrA | |||
warrants further investigation for possible beneficial effects in models of inflammation and autoimmunity, | |||
as well as in other conditions in which mediators derived from n-6 fatty acids can affect homeostasis | |||
adversely." A. A. Starkov, et al., "Regulation of the energy coupling in mitochondria by some steroid and | |||
thyroid hormones," Bioch. Biophys. Acta 1318(1-2), 173-183, 1997. (Thyroid and progesterone improve | |||
respiratory efficiency, lowering oxygen consumption which restoring energy production.) R. B. Gibbs, et al., | |||
"Effects of estrogen on potassium stimulated acetylcholine release in the hippocampus and overlying cortex | |||
of adult rats," Brain Res. 749(1), 143-146, 1997. (Increased response.) I. V. Gusakov, et al., | |||
"Investigation of the role of free-radical processes in epilepsy and epileptogenesis," Bull. Exp. Biol. | |||
& Medicine 117(2), 206, 1994. | |||
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Aliev, "The use of antioxidants in the treatment of tic-accompanied hyperkineses in children," Bull. Exp. | |||
Biol. & Medicine 117(2), 222, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
D. A. Sutkovoi and N. I. Lisyanyi, "Relationship between the kinetics of lipid peroxidation and autoimmune | |||
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369-381, 1995. "...major functional derangements, primarily at a hypothalamic rather than a pituitary site, | |||
have been determined as concomitants of aging in women." "...aging may impair the negative feedback | |||
sensitivity to ovarian sex steroids...." Hormonal changes at menopause "may represent the sum of functional | |||
aberrations that were initiated much earlier in life...." "...prolonged estrogen exposure facilitates the | |||
loss of hypothalamic neurons...." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. R. Brawer, et al., "Ovary-dependent degeneration in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus," Endocrinology 107, | |||
274-279, 1980. J. Herbert and S. Zuckerman, "Ovarian stimulation from cerebral lesion in ferrets," J. | |||
Endocrinology 17(4), 433-443, 1958. G. C. Desjardins, "Estrogen-induced hypothalamic beta-endorphin neuron | |||
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neurons is prevented by treatment with antioxidants indicating that it results from estradiol-induced | |||
formation of free radicals." "...this beta-endorphin cell loss is followed by a compensatory upregulation of | |||
mu opioid receptors in the vicinity of LHRH cell bodies." Resulting supersensitivity of the cells results | |||
"in chronic opioid suppression of the pattern of LHRH release, and subsequently that of LH." The neurotoxic | |||
effects of estradiol cause a "cascade of neuroendocrine aberrations resulting in anovulatory acyclicity." | |||
Treatment with an opiod antagonist "reversed the cystic morphology of ovaries and restored normal ovarian | |||
cycles" in estrogen-treated rats. G. B. Melis, et al., "Evidence that estrogens inhibit LH secretion through | |||
opioids in postmenopausal women using naloxone," Neuroendocrinology 39, 60-63, 1984. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
H. J. Sipe, et al., "The metabolism of 17 beta-estradiol by lactoperoxidase: A possible source of oxidative | |||
stress in breast cancer," Carcinogenesis 15(11), 2637-2643, 1994. "...molecular oxygen is consumed by a | |||
sequence of reactions initiated by the glutathione thiyl radical. ...the estradiol phenoxyl radical | |||
abstracts hydrogen from...NADH to generate the NAD radical." "...the futile metabolism of micromolar | |||
quantities of estradiol catalyzes the oxidation of much greater concentrations of biochemical reducing | |||
cofactors, such as glutathione and NADH, with hydrogen peroxide produced as a consequence." S. Santagati, et | |||
al., "Estrogen receptor is expressed in different types of glial cells in culture," J. Neurochem. 63(6), | |||
2058-2064, 1994. "...in all three types of glial cell analyzed in almost equal amounts..." D. X. Liu and L. | |||
P. Li, "Prostaglandin F-2 alpha rises in response to hydroxyl radical generated in vivo," Free Radical Biol. | |||
Med. 18(3), 571-576, 1995. "Free radicals and some free fatty acids, such as arachidonic acid | |||
metabolites...may form a feedback loop in which generation of one type leads to formation of the other." | |||
"Prostaglandin F-2 alpha dramatically increased in response to hydroxyl radical generation...." J. Owens and | |||
P. A. Schwartzkroin, "Suppression of evoked IPSPs by arachidonic acid and prostaglandin F-2 alpha," Brain | |||
Res. 691(1-2), 223-228, 1995. "These findings suggest that high levels of AA and its metabolites may bias | |||
neurons towards excitation." [Estrogen appears to support this excitatory system at every level, while | |||
prostaglandin F2 alpha alters steroid balance, by suppressing progesterone synthesis.] J. G. Liehr, et al., | |||
"4-hydroxylation of estradiol by human uterine myometrium and myoma microsomes: Implications for the | |||
mechanism of uterine tumorigenesis," Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92(20), 9220-9224, 1995. "... elicits biological | |||
activities distinct from estradiol, most notably an oxidant stress response induced by free radicals | |||
generated by metabolic redox cycling reactions." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. G. Liehr and D. Roy, "Free radical generation by redox cycling of estrogens," Free Rad. Biol. Med. 8, | |||
415-423, 1990. P. Aschheim, "Resultats fournis par la greffe heterochrone des ovaires dan l'etude de la | |||
regulation hypothalamo-hypophyso-ovarienne de la ratte senile," Gerontologia 10, 65-75, 1964/65. "Our last | |||
experiment, grafting ovaries...into senile rats which had been castrated (ovariectomized) when young, and | |||
its result, the appearance of estrous cycles, seems explicable by this hypothesis. Everything happens as if | |||
the long absence of ovarian hormones... had kept the cells of the hypothalamus in the state of youth. It's | |||
as if the messages of the circulating steroids fatigued the hypothalamic memory." "What are the factors that | |||
cause this diminution of the hypothalamic sensitivity...? Kennedy incriminates a decrease in the cellular | |||
metabolism in general...." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
P. Ascheim, "Aging in the hypothalamic-hypophyseal-ovarian axis in the rat," pp. 376-418 in: A. V. Everitt | |||
and J. A. Burgess, editors, Hypothalamus, Pituitary and Aging, C. C. Thomas, Springfield, 1976. C. A. Frye | |||
and J. D. Sturgis, "Neurosteroids affect spatial reference, working, and long-term memory of female rats," | |||
Neurobiol. Learn. Memory 64(1), 83-96, 1995. [Female rats take longer to acquire a spatial task during | |||
behavioral estrus.] (CA Frye, boston univ., dept biol, behavioral neurosci lab, boston 02215) | |||
"Estrus-associated decrements in a water maze task are limited to acquisition," Physiol. Behav. 57(1), 5-14, | |||
1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
C. A. Kristensen, et al., "Effect of estrogen withdrawal on energy-rich phosphates and prediction of | |||
estrogen-dependence monitored by in vivo 31P magnetic resonance spectoscopy of four human breast cancer | |||
xenografts," Cancer Research 55(8), 1664-1669, 1995. This is a very important confirmation of the idea that | |||
estrogen, by blocking energy, constrains cell function. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A. J. Roberts and L. D. Keith, "Corticosteroids enhance convulsion susceptibility via central | |||
mineralocorticoid receptors," Psychoneuroendocrinology 20(8), 891-902, 1995. ("...increase corticosterone | |||
levels are associated with increased severity of ethanol, pentobarbitol, and diazepam withdrawal. Further | |||
work with chemical convulsants suggests that mineralocorticoid receptors mediate excitatory effects of | |||
corticosteroids on convulsion susceptibility. The circadian rhythm in convulsion susceptibility varies with | |||
the circadian rhythm of plasma corticosterone levels and MR binding." "...MR are substantially bound at rest | |||
and maximally occupied during the circadian peak in corticosteroid levels and during stressor exposure, | |||
these receptors are implicated in the maintenance of and in changes in the arousal state of animals.") L. | |||
Murri, et al., "Neuroendocrine evaluation in catamenial epilepsy," Funct. Neurol. 1(4) 399-403, 1986. "Our | |||
data showed a reduction of luteal phase progesterone secretion; an imbalanced secretion of ovarian steroids | |||
plays a role in the catamenial exacerbation of epilepsy." S. Bag, et al., "Pregnancy and epilepsy," J. | |||
Neurol. 236(5), 311-313, 1989. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Patients with increased seizure frequency had significantly higher oestrogen levels, lower level of | |||
progesterone...." "...abortions and status epilepticus had high serum oestrogen levels." M. I. Balabolkin, | |||
et al., "The role of the female sex hormones in the pathogenesis of catamenial epileptic seizures," Ter. | |||
Arkh. 66(4), 68-71, 1994. "...a tendency to deficient luteal phase and relative hyperestrogenemia in all the | |||
cycle phases." C. A. Guerreiro, "Ovulatory period and epileptic crisis," Arq. Neuropsiquiatr. 49(2), | |||
198-203, 1991. "We think the estrogen peak is probably the main cause of the increased frequency of | |||
epileptic seizures during the ovulatory period." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
U. Bonuccelli, et al., "Unbalanced progesterone and estradiol secretion in catamenial epilepsy," Epilepsy | |||
Res. 3(2), 100-106, 1989. (Luteal secretion ratio, progesterone to estrogen, was significantly reduced in | |||
patients versus controls.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
T. Backstrom, "Epilepsy in women," Experientia 32(2), 248-249, 1976. "...a significant positive correlation | |||
between estrogen/progesterone ratio and scores of fits." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A. G. Herzog, "Hormonal changes in epilepsy," Epilepsia 36(4), 323-326, 1995. A. G. Herzog, "Progesterone | |||
therapy in women with partial and secondary generalized seizures," Neurology 45(9), 1660-1662, 1995. A. G. | |||
Herzog, "Reproductive endocrine considerations and hormonal therapy for women with epilepsy," Epilepsia | |||
32(Suppl.6), S27-33, 1991. "Seizure frequency varies with the serum estradiol to progesterone ratio." "... | |||
propensity for onset at menarch and exacerbation of seizures during the months or years leading up to | |||
menopause..." polycystic ovarian syndrome and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism are significantly | |||
overrepresented among women with epilepsy. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
R.H. Mattson and J. A. Cramer, "Epilepsy, sex hormones, and antiepileptic drugs," Epilepsia 26(Suppl. 1), | |||
S40-51, 1985. There were fewer seizures during the luteal phase but they increased when the progesterone | |||
level declined. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J.J. Jacono and J. M. Robertson, "The effects of estrogen, progesterone, and ionized calcium on seizures | |||
during the menstrual cycle of epileptic women," Epilepsia 28(5), 571-577, 1987. A positive relation of serum | |||
estrogen and seizures, negative relation between serum ionized calcium and seizures, and negative relation | |||
between serum estrogen and calcium. F. E. Jensen, et al., "Epileptogenic effect of hypoxia in the immature | |||
rodent brain," Ann. Neurol. 29(6),629-836, 1991. E. C. Wirrell, et al., "Will a critical level of | |||
hyperventilation-induced hypocapnia always induce an absence seizure?" Epilepsia 37(5), 459-462, 1996. A. | |||
Nehlig, et al., "Absence seizures induce a decrease in cerebral blood flow: Human and animal data," J. | |||
Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. 16(1), 147-155, 1996. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some clinical laboratory findings in epilepsy: Folic acid, serum decrease, R. E. Davis, et al., "Serum | |||
pyridoxal, folate, and vitamin B12 levels in institutionalized epileptics," Epilepsia 16, 463-8, 1975. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serum GGT, constantly elevated. Ewen and Griffiths, "Gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase: Elevated activities in | |||
certain neurologic diseases," Am. J. Clin. Pathol. 59, 2-9, 1973. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
IgA, CSF decreased, F. Mora, et al. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Iron-binding capacity, total, serum decrease. F. Mora, et al. Magnesium, serum, decreased; between seizures. | |||
C S Babel, et al Prealbumin, CSF, increased, the only protein to increase in epileptics. F. Mora, et al. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pyridoxine, serum, sometimes decreased. R. L. Searcy, Diagnostic Biochemistry, McGraw-Hill, 1969. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<head><title>Estriol, DES, DDT, etc.</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Estriol, DES, DDT, etc. | |||
</h1> | |||
<article class="posted"> | |||
<p> | |||
A review of the use of estrogens reported in J.A.M.A. (only up to 1987) found nearly 200 different | |||
"indications" for its use. (Palmlund, 1996.) Using the conservative language of that journal, such use | |||
could be said to constitute wildly irresponsible "empirical" medical practice. More appropriate language | |||
could be used. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pollution of the environment and food supply by estrogenic chemicals is getting increased attention. | |||
Early in the study of estrogens, it was noticed that soot, containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, | |||
was both estrogenic and carcinogenic. Since then, it has been found that phenolics and chlorinated | |||
hydrocarbons are significantly estrogenic, and that many estrogenic herbicides, pesticides, and | |||
industrial by-products persist in the environment, causing infertility, deformed reproductive organs, | |||
tumors, and other biological defects, including immunodeficiency. In the Columbia River, a recent study | |||
found that about 25% of the otters and muskrats were anatomically deformed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogenic pollution kills birds, panthers, alligators, old men, young women, fish, seals, babies, and | |||
ecosystems. Some of these chemicals are sprayed on forests by the US Department of Agriculture, where | |||
they enter lakes, underwater aquifers, rivers, and oceans. Private businesses spray them on farms and | |||
orchards, or put them into the air as smoke or vapors, or dump them directly into rivers. Homeowners put | |||
them on their lawns and gardens. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Natural estrogens, from human urine, enter the rivers from sewage. Many tons of synthetic and | |||
pharmaceutical estrogens, administered to menopausal women in quantities much larger than their bodies | |||
ever produced metabolically, are being added to the rivers. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the same way that weak estrogens in the environment may become hundreds of times more estrogenic by | |||
synergistic interactions (J. A. McLachlan, et al., <em>Science,</em> June 7, 1996), combinations of | |||
natural, medical, dietary, and environmental estrogens are almost certain to have unexpected results. | |||
The concept of a "protective estrogen" is very similar to the idea of "protective mutagens" or | |||
"protective carcinogens," though <em>in the case of estrogens, their promoters don't even know what the | |||
normal, natural functions of estrogen are. | |||
</em> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In November, 1995, an international conference was held to study the problem of "Environmental | |||
endocrine-disrupting chemicals," and to devise strategies for increasing public awareness of the | |||
seriousness of the problem. Their "Statement from the work session" says "New evidence is especially | |||
worrisome because it underscores the exquisite sensitivity of the developing nervous system to chemical | |||
perturbations that result in functional abnormalities." "This work session was convened because of the | |||
growing concern that failure to confront the problem could have major economic and societal | |||
implications." <strong>"We are certain of the following: Endocrine-disrupting chemicals can undermine | |||
neurological and behavioral development and subsequent potential of individuals...."</strong> | |||
"Because the endocrine system is sensitive to perturbation, it is a likely target for disturbance." | |||
"Man-made endocrine-disrupting chemicals range across all continents and oceans. They are found in | |||
native populations from the Arctic to the tropics, and, because of their persistence in the body, can be | |||
passed from generation to generation." <strong>"...many endocrine-disrupting contaminants, even if less | |||
potent than the natural products, are present in living tissue at concentrations millions of times | |||
higher than the natural hormones."</strong> "The developing brain exhibits specific and often narrow | |||
windows during which exposure to endocrine disruptors can produce permanent changes in its structure and | |||
function." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In spite of this increased exposure to estrogens, there is a new wave of advertising of estrogenic | |||
substances, based on the idea that weak estrogens will provide protection against strong estrogens. The | |||
environmental background of estrogenic pollution already provides a continuous estrogenic exposure. In | |||
the 1940s, Alexander Lipshuts demonstrated that a continuous, weak estrogenic stimulus was immensely | |||
effective in producing, first fibromas, then cancer, in one organ after another, and the effect was not | |||
limited to the reproductive system. How is it possible that the idea of "protection" from a weak | |||
estrogen seems convincing to so many? Isn't this the same process that we saw when the nuclear industry | |||
promoted Luckey's doctrine of "radiation hormesis," literally the claim that "a little radiation is | |||
positively good for us"? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
DES (diethyl stilbestrol) is one of the most notorious estrogens, because studies in humans revealed | |||
that its use during pregnancy not only caused cancer, miscarriages, blood clots, etc., in the women who | |||
used it, but also caused cancer, infertility, and deformities in their children, and even in their | |||
grandchildren. (But those transgenerational effects are not unique to it.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides the absurd use of DES to prevent miscarriages, around 1950 it was also used to treat | |||
vulvovaginitis in little girls, for menstrual irregularity at puberty, to treat sterility, dysfunctional | |||
bleeding, endometriosis, amenorrhea, oligomenorrhea, dysmenorrhea, migraine headaches, nausea and | |||
vomiting, and painful breast engorgement or severe bleeding after childbirth. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
DES is a "weak" estrogen, in the sense that it doesn't compete with natural estrogens for the "estrogen | |||
receptors." (Estriol binds more strongly to receptors than DES does: "Cytosolic and nuclear estrogen | |||
receptors in the genital tract of the rhesus monkey," J. Steroid Bioch. 8(2), 151-155, 1977.) Pills | |||
formerly contained from 5 to 250 mg. of DES. The 1984 <em>PDR</em> lists doses for hypogonadism and | |||
ovarian failure as 0.2 to 0.5 mg. daily. In general, dosage of estrogens decreased by a factor of 100 | |||
after the 1960s. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
An aggressively stupid editorial by Alvin H. Follingstad, from the Jan. 2, 1978, issue of JAMA, pages | |||
29-30, "Estriol, the forgotten estrogen?" is being circulated to promote the use of estriol, or the | |||
phytoestrogens. It argues that women who secrete larger amounts of estriol are resistant to cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p>By some tests, estriol is a "weak estrogen," by others it is a powerful estrogen.</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When estriol was placed in the uterus of a rabbit, only 1.25 mcg. was sufficient to prevent implantation | |||
and destroy the blastocyst. (Dmowski, et al., 1977.) Since the effect was local, the body weight of the | |||
animal doesn't make much difference, when thinking about the probable effect of a similar local | |||
contentration of the hormone on human tissues. The anti-progestational activity of estriol and estradiol | |||
are approximately the same. (Tamotsu and Pincus, 1958.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When 5 mg. of estriol was given to women intravaginally, this very large dose suppressed LH within 2 | |||
hours, and suppressed FSH in 5 hours. Given orally, 8 mg. had similar effects on LH and FSH after 30 | |||
days, and also had an estrogenic effect on the vaginal epithelium.. These quick systemic effects of a | |||
"weak estrogen" are essentially those of a strong estrogen, except for the size of the dose. (Schiff, et | |||
al., 1978.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p>When administered subcutaneously, estriol induced abortions and stillbirths (Velardo, et al.)</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Another indication of the strength of an estrogen is its ability to cause the uterus to enlarge. Estriol | |||
is slightly weaker, in terms of milligrams required to cause a certain rate of uterine enlargement, than | |||
estradiol. (Clark, et al., 1979.) But isn't the important question whether or not the weak estrogen | |||
imitates all of the effects of estradiol, including carcinogenesis and blood clotting, in addition to | |||
any special harmful effects it might have? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When added to long-term culture of human breast cancer cells, estriol stimulated their growth, and | |||
overcame the antiestrogenic effects of tamoxifen, even at concentrations hundreds of times lower than | |||
that of tamoxifen. "The data do not support an antiestrogenic role for estriol in human breast cancer." | |||
(Lippman, et al., 1977.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Studies of the urinary output of estriol/estradiol in women with or without breast cancer do not | |||
reliably show the claimed association between low estriol/estradiol and cancer, and the stimulating | |||
effect of estriol on the growth of cancer cells suggests that any alteration of the estrogen ratio is | |||
likely to be a <em>consequence</em> of the disease, rather than a cause. The conversion of estradiol to | |||
other estrogens occurs mainly in the liver, in the non-pregnant woman, as does the further metabolism of | |||
the estrogens into glucuronides and sulfates. The hormonal conditions leading to and associated with | |||
breast cancer all affect the liver and its metabolic systems. The hydroxylating enzymes are also | |||
affected by toxins. Hypothyroidism (low T3), low progesterone, pregnenolone, DHEA, etiocholanolone, and | |||
high prolactin, growth hormone, and cortisol are associated with the chronic high estrogen and breast | |||
cancer physiologies, and modify the liver's regulatory ability. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The decreased output of hormones when the fetal-placental system is dying is a natural consequence, | |||
since the placenta produces hormones, and during pregnancy converts estradiol to estriol. Since | |||
estradiol in excess kills the fetus, its conversion by the placenta to estriol is in accord with the | |||
evidence showing that estriol is the more quickly excreted form. (G. S. Rao, 1973.) The conversion of | |||
16-hydroxy androstenedione and 16-hydroxy-DHEA into estriol by the placenta (Vega Ramos, 1973) would | |||
also cause fetal exhaustion or death to result in lower estriol production. But a recent observation | |||
that a surge of estriol production precedes the onset of labor, and that its premature occurrence can | |||
identify women at risk of premature delivery (McGregor, et al., 1995) suggests that the estriol surge | |||
might reflect the mother's increased production of adrenal androgens during stress. (This would be | |||
analogous to the situation in the polycystic ovary syndrome, in which excessive estradiol drives the | |||
adrenals to produce androgens.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estetrol, which has one more hydroxyl group than estriol, is a "more sensitive and reliable indicator of | |||
fetal morbidity than estriol during toxemic pregnancies," because it starts to decrease earlier, or | |||
decreases more, than estriol. (Kundu, et al., 1978.) This seems to make it even clearer that the decline | |||
of estriol is a consequence, not a cause, of fetal sickness or death. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A 1994 publication (B. Zumoff, "Hormonal profiles in women with breast cancer," <em>Obstet. Gynecol. | |||
Clin. North. Am. (U.S.) 21(4),</em> 751-772) reported that there are four hormonal features in women | |||
with breast cancer<strong>:</strong> diminished androgen production, luteal inadequacy, increased | |||
16-hydroxylation of estradiol, and increased prolactin. The 16-hydroxylation converts estradiol into | |||
estriol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A new technique for radiographically locating a hormone-dependent breast cancer is based on the fact | |||
that estriol-sulfate is a major metabolite of estradiol. The technique showed the tumor to have about a | |||
six times higher concentration of estriol-sulfate than liver or muscle. (N. Shimura, et al., "Specific | |||
imaging of hormone-dependent mammary carcinoma in nude mice with [131I]-anti-estriol 3-sulfate | |||
antibody," <em>Nucl. Med. Biol. (England) 22(5),</em> 547-553, 1995.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Another association of elevated conversion of estradiol to estriol with disease was found to occur in | |||
men who had a myocardial infarction, compared to controls who hadn't. (W. S. Bauld, et al., 1957.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The estrogens in clover have been known for several decades to have a contraceptive action in sheep, and | |||
other phytoestrogens are known to cause deformities in the genitals, feminization of men, and anatomical | |||
changes in the brain as well as functional masculinization of the female brain. (Register, et al., 1995; | |||
Levy, et al, 1995; Clarkson, et al., 1995; Gavaler, et al., 1995.) The effects of the phytoestrogens are | |||
very complex, because they modify the sensitivity of cells to natural estrogens, and also modify the | |||
metabolism of estrogens, with the result that the effects on a given tissue can be either pro-estrogenic | |||
and anti-estrogenic. For example, the flavonoids, naringenin, quercetin and kaempherol (kaempherol is an | |||
antioxidant, a phytoestrogen, and a mutagen) modify the metabolism of estradiol, causing increased | |||
bioavailability of both estrone and estradiol. (W. Schubert, et al., "Inhibition of 17-beta-estradiol | |||
metabolism by grapefruit juice in ovariectomized women," <em>Maturitas (Ireland) 30(2-3),</em> 155-163, | |||
1994.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Why do plants make phytoestrogens? There is some information indicating that these compounds evolved to | |||
regulate the plants' interactions with other organisms--to attract bacteria, or to repel insects, for | |||
example, rather than just as pigment-forming materials. (Baker, 1995.) The fact that some of them bind | |||
to our "estrogen receptors" is probably misleading, because of their many other effects, including | |||
inhibiting enzyme functions involved in the regulation of steroids and prostaglandins. Their | |||
biochemistry in animals is much more complicated than that of natural estrogens, which is itself so | |||
complicated that we can only guess what the consequences might be when we change the concentration and | |||
the ratio of substances in that complex system. (See quotation from Velardo, et al., page 6) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
These "natural" effects in sheep were forerunners of the observed estrogenic effects in wild animals, | |||
caused by pollutants. Twenty-five years ago I reviewed many of the issues of estrogen's toxicity, and | |||
the ubiquity of estrogenic substances, and since then have regularly spoken about it, but I haven't | |||
concentrated much attention on the phytoestrogens, because we can usually just choose foods that are | |||
relatively free of them. They are so often associated with other food toxins--antithyroid factors, | |||
inhibitors of digestive enzymes, immunosuppressants, etc.--that the avoidance of certain foods is | |||
desirable. Recently an advocate of soybeans said "if they inhibit the thyroid, why isn't there an | |||
epidemic of hypothyroidism in Asia?" I happened to hear this right after seeing newspaper articles about | |||
China's problem with 100,000,000 cretins<strong>;</strong> yes, Asia has endemic hypothyroidism, and | |||
beans are widely associated with hypothyroidism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When I first heard about clover-induced miscarriages in sheep, I began reading about the subject, | |||
because it was relevant to the work I was doing at that time on reproductive aging. Sheep which are | |||
adapted to living at high altitude, where all animals have reduced fertility, have an adaptive type of | |||
hemoglobin, with a greater affinity for oxygen. Fetal hemoglobin, in animals at sea-level, has a great | |||
affinity for oxygen, making it possible for the fetus to get enough oxygen, despite its insulation from | |||
the mother's direct blood supply. The high-altitude-tolerant sheep have hemoglobin which is able to | |||
deliver sufficient oxygen to the uterus to meet the needs of the embryo/fetus, even during relative | |||
oxygen-deprivation. These sheep are able to sustain pregnancy while grazing on clover. It seemed evident | |||
that estrogen and high altitude had something in common, namely, oxygen deprivation, and it also seemed | |||
evident that these sheep provided the explanation for estrogen's abortifacient effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen's effects, ranging from shock to cancer, all seem to relate to an interference with the use of | |||
oxygen. Different estrogens have different affinities for various tissues, and a given substance is | |||
likely to have effects other than estrogenicity, and the presence of other substances will modify the | |||
way a tissue responds, but the stressful shift away from oxidative production of energy is the factor | |||
that all estrogens have in common. Otherwise, how could suffocation and x-irradiation have estrogenic | |||
effects? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pharmaceutical misrepresentations regarding the estrogens rank, in terms of human consequences, with the | |||
radiation damage from fall-out from bomb tests and reactor-leaks, with industrial pollution, with | |||
degradation of the food supply--with genocide, in fact. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Advertising gets a bad name when it can't be distinguished from mass murder. At a certain point, we | |||
can't afford to waste our time making subtle distinctions between ignorance and malevolence. If we begin | |||
pointing out the lethal consequences of "stupid" or quasi-stupid commer- cial/governmental policies, the | |||
offenders will have the burden of proving that their actions are the result of irresponsible ignorance, | |||
rather than criminal duplicity. From the tobacco senators to the chemical/pharmaceutical/food/energy | |||
industries and their agents in the governmental agencies, those who do great harm must be held | |||
responsible. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The idea of corporate welfare, in which public funds are given in massive subsidies to rich | |||
corporations, is now generally recognized. Next, we have to increase our consciousness of corporate | |||
responsibility, and that ordinary criminal law, especially RICO, can be directly applied to | |||
corporations. It remains to be seen whether a government can be made to stop giving public funds to | |||
corporations, and instead, to begin enforcing the law against them--and against those in the agencies | |||
who participated in their crimes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the U.S., the death penalty is sometimes reserved for "aggravated homicide." If those who kill | |||
hundreds of thousands for the sake of billions of dollars in profits are not committing aggravated | |||
homicide, then it must be that no law written in the English language can be objectively interpreted, | |||
and the legal system is an Alice in Wonderland convenience for the corporate state. | |||
</p> | |||
<p>Copyright: Raymond Peat, PhD 1997</p> | |||
<p>PO Box 5764 Eugene, OR 97405</p> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
<p><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Dr. Bernard Weiss, Dept. of Environmental Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine, | |||
Rochester, NY. and 17 others, work session on environmental endocrine-disrupting chemicals, Nov. 5-10, | |||
1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Isaac Schiff, et al., "Effects of estriol administration on the hypogonadal woman," Fertil. Steril. | |||
30(3), 278-282, 1978. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
N. P. J. Kundu, et al., "Sequential determination of serum human placental lactogen, estriol, and | |||
estetrol for assessment of fetal morbidity," Obstet. Gynecol. 52(5), 513-520, 1978. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. E. Lieberman, et al., "Estrogen control of prolactin synthesis in vitro," P.N.A.S. (USA) 75(12), | |||
5946-5949, 1978. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Marc Lippman, et al., "Effects of estrone, estradiol and estriol on hormone-responsive human breast | |||
cancer in long term tissue culture," Cancer Res. 37(6), 1901-1907, 1977. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
W. P. Dmowski, et al., "Effect of intrauterine estriol on reproductive function in the rabbit," Fertil. | |||
Steril. 28(3), 262-8, 1977. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
W. S. Bauld, et al, "Abnormality of estrogen metabolism in human subjects with myocardial infarction," | |||
<em>Canadian Jour. Biochem. and Physiol. 35(12),</em> 1277-1288, 1957. (The conversion of estradiol to | |||
estriol was higher in men with previous myocardial infarction than in controls.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
R. A. Edgren and D. W. Calhoun, "Interaction of estrogens on the vaginal smear of spayed rats," <em>Am. | |||
J. Physiol. 189(2),</em> 355-357, 1957. "Employing the vaginal smear as an index of effect, | |||
combinations of various estrogenic substances were tested for interaction. Studies were concentrated at | |||
the approximate 50% response level." "These data are interpreted as indicating simple additive | |||
relationships among the compounds tested." "Curiously then, estrogens that showed inhibitory | |||
interrelationships when tested on uterine growth had <strong>simple additive interactions when tested on | |||
the vaginal smears." "...it seems reasonable to postulate that a given hormone combination may evoke | |||
differing levels of response in different target organs, and particularly, that increase of one | |||
component may increase response at one site while decreasing it at another. Many steroids...are | |||
present in the mammalian circulation during various phases of the sex cycle and are known to modify | |||
the effects of any given estrogen. This hormonal multiplicity apparently constitutes an | |||
estrogen-buffering system and supports the hypothesis that sexual responses depend '...upon a rather | |||
precise hormonal homeostasis.'"</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
R. C. Merrill, "Estriol: A review," <em>Physiol. Revs. 38(3),</em> 463-480, 1958. <strong>"...estriol | |||
itself is a potent estrogen, contrary to the usual conception of its being just a metabolite of the | |||
more potent estrone and estradiol.</strong> Although ordinarily less effective than estrone and | |||
estradiol in promoting vaginal cornification, estriol, under optimum conditions, approaches their | |||
effectiveness for this purpose. Estriol is more potent than estrone or estradiol in causing | |||
establishment and opening of the vaginal orifice, in promoting imbibition of uterine fluid, in | |||
increasing lactic dehydrogenase activity in the uterus, and in stimulating mitotic activity in the | |||
epidermis of the mouse ear. The activity of estriol is of the same order of magnitude as that of estrone | |||
and estradiol in other estrogenic actions, such as to promote uterine growth at low concentrations | |||
(although less effective at high doses), to increase beta-glucuronidase and reduced diphosphopyridine | |||
nucleotide oxidase activity in the uterus, to reduce motility of the uterus in vivo, and to stimulate | |||
ovarian growth, body weight, phagocytosis of carbon by reticuloendothelial cells, ciliary movements of | |||
the buccopharyngeal mucose of the frog, and new bone formation. The fibromatogenic activity of estriol | |||
in the guinea pig is much less than that of estrone or estradiol. Recent experiments suggest and partly | |||
verify the hypothesis that estriol stimulates the cervix, vagina and vulva more effectively than estrone | |||
or estradiol, whereas the latter are much more effective on the corpus uteri." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
T. Miyake and G. Pincus, "Anti-progestational activity of estrogens in rabbit endometrium," <em>Proc. | |||
Soc. Exptl. Biol. and Med. 99(2)</em> 478-482, 1958. "The anti-progestational activity of 4 | |||
estrogens--estrone, estradiol, estriol, and stilbestrol--administered subcutaneously with progesterone | |||
into Clauberg rabbits has been demonstrated...." <strong>"The anti-progestational activities of these | |||
estrogens are approximately the same."</strong> "...estrogen may depress reactivity of the | |||
endometrium to progesterone rather than neutralize or inactivate progesterone in the body." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. T. Velardo, et al., "Effect of various steroids on gestation and litter size in rats," <em>Fertility | |||
and Sterility 7(4),</em> 301-311, 1956. "...certain metabolites of estrogenic and progestative | |||
substances that were previously considered to be 'weak' or inert may well play a role in the | |||
reproductive process." <strong>"We have been impressed with the probability that any endocrine | |||
receptor-organ response is not accomplished by the independent action of one hormone alone. It | |||
appears more likely that such response is the physiological expression of the sum total of the | |||
biologic hormones and their metabolites in concert on the receptor organs."</strong> "The effect of | |||
estriol on the birth rate of these rats was more dramatic." "...when estriol was used before mating, it | |||
reduced the litter size to 66 per cent of the controls." "However, when the same dose was employed from | |||
the day of mating and daily thereafter beyond the time of usual implantation, 6 days later, a reduction | |||
of live births to 33 per cent of the controls was produced. In this experiment the medication was | |||
withheld until after ovulation had presumably occurred. The presence of placental scars and an increased | |||
incidence of abortions and stillbirths argues against the possibility that the fertile ova have been | |||
'locked' by the estrogen in the tubes." "...the incidence of placental scars, abortions, and stillbirths | |||
further bears witness to the possibility that the steroids employed interfered with the optimum | |||
differentiation of progestational endometrial changes, rather than affecting any suppression of | |||
ovulatory mechanisms." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
B. Register, et al., "Effect of neonatal exposure to diethylstilbestrol, coumestrol, and beta-sitosterol | |||
on pituitary responsiveness and sexually dimorphic nucleus volume," <em>P.S.E.B.M. 208,</em> 72, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. R. Levy, et al., "Effect of prenatal exposure to the phytoestrogen genistein on sexual | |||
differentiation in rats," <em>P.S.E.B.M. 208,</em> 60, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
B.D. Lyn-Cook, et al., "Methylation profile and amplification of proto-oncogenes in rat pancreas induced | |||
with phytoestrogens," <em>PSEBM 208, </em>116, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. S. Gavaler, et al., "Phytoestrogen congeners of alcoholic beverages: Current status,: <em>PSEBM | |||
208,</em> 98, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A. I. Nwannenna, et al., "Clinical changes in ovariectomized ewes exposed to phytoestrogens and | |||
17beta-estradiol implants," <em>PSEBM 208,</em> 92, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
P. L. Whitten, et al., "Influence of phytoestrogen diets on estradiol action in the rat uterus," | |||
Steroids 59, 443-449, 1994. <strong>"Coumestrol did not antagonize the uterotrophic action of estradiol | |||
when administered either prior to, or jointly with, E2 treatment, or when administered orally or | |||
parenterally." "These findings contradict the assumption that all phytoestrogens are necessarily | |||
antiproliferative agents...."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. E. Baker, "Endocrine activity of plant-derived compounds: An evolutionary perspective,"<em> | |||
PSEBM 208,</em> 131, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
I. Palmlund, "To cell from environment," Chapter 19 in <em>Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Hormonal | |||
Carcinogenesis,</em> published by Wiley-Liss. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. H. Clark, et al., "Nuclear binding of the estrogen receptor: Heterogeneity of sites and uterotropic | |||
response," <em>Steroid Hormone Receptor Systems,</em> page 17, 1979. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
P. Vega Ramos, et al., "Formation of oestriol from C19, 16-oxygenated steroids by microsomal | |||
preparations of human placenta," <em>Res. on Steroids, vol. V,</em> page 79, Proc. of the Fifth Meeting | |||
of the International Study Group for Steroid Hormones, edited by M. Finkelstein, et al., 1973. | |||
</p> | |||
<p>G. S. Rao, "Enzymes in steroid metabolism," <em>Res. on Steroids, vol. V, </em>page 175, 1973.</p> | |||
<p> | |||
L. H. Carter and C. B. Harrington, <em>Administrative Law and Politics</em> HarperCollins, 1991. | |||
"Capture occurs when agencies informally promote the very interests they are officially responsible for | |||
regulating." In 1925, Coolidge's appointment of "anti-public" W. E. Humphrey to the FTC led some of its | |||
former supporters to call for the abolition of the FTC. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong> | |||
"If nearly a century of regulatory history tells us anything, it is that the rules-making agencies | |||
of government are almost invariably captured by the industries which they are established to | |||
control."</strong> Robert Heilbroner, In the Name of Profit, 1972, p. 239. "Federal economic | |||
regulation was generally designed by the regulated interest to meet its own end, and not those of the | |||
public or the commonweal." Gabriel Kolko, <em>The Triumph of Conservatism: A Reinterpretation of | |||
American History, 1900-1916,</em> 1963. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"It is a given in the modern doctrine of most tort laws that the existence of potential liability if | |||
anything encourages citizens to use greater thoughtfulness and care in their daily actions, and no | |||
obvious reasons suggest the same dynamic should not affect public officials." Adm. Law. & Pols., p. | |||
404. "That Congress decided, after the passage of the Fourteenth Amendment, to enact legislation | |||
specifically requiring state officials to respond in federal court for their failures to observe the | |||
constitutional limitations on their powers is hardly a reason for excusing their federal counterparts | |||
for the identical constitutional transgressions." <strong>"In situations of abuse, an action for damages | |||
against the responsible official can be an important means of vindicating constitutional | |||
guarantees...." Justice White, Butz v. Economou, p. 409, Adm. Law & Pols. | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
</article> | |||
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<h1> | |||
Estrogen and Osteoporosis | |||
</h1> | |||
The government declared victory in the war on cancer, though the age-specific death rate from cancer keeps | |||
increasing. In the equally well publicized effort to prevent disability and death from osteoporosis, no one is | |||
declaring victory, because the only trend in its incidence that has been reported is an increase. The | |||
estrogen-promoting culture tells us that this is because of the aging of the population, but the age corrected | |||
numbers still show a great increase--for example, in Finland between 1970 and 1995, the number of women (for a | |||
given population of women older than 60) breaking their forearm because of osteoporosis more than doubled | |||
(Palvanen, et al., 1998). That this happened during a time when the use of estrogen had become much more common | |||
doesn't present a good argument for the protective effects of estrogen treatment. (And during this period there | |||
was a large increase in the consumption of estrogenic soy products.) Recently our local newspaper had a story at | |||
the bottom of the front page reporting that lean women who used estrogen and synthetic progestins had an 80% | |||
higher rate of breast cancer. Several days later, across the top of the front page, there was a rebuttal | |||
article, quoting some doctors including a "world class expert on hormone replacement therapy" and a woman who | |||
has taken Premarin for forty years and urges everyone to take it. The "protection against osteoporosis" and | |||
against heart disease, they said, must be weighed against a trifle such as the 80% increase in cancer. It | |||
appeared that the newspaper was apologizing for reporting a fact that could make millions of women nervous. (Jan | |||
26, Register-Guard). Medical magazines, like the mass media, don't like to miss any opportunity to inform the | |||
public about the importance of using estrogen to prevent osteoporosis. Their attention to the bone-protective | |||
effect of progesterone has been noticeably less than their mad campaign to sell estrogen, despite the evidence | |||
that progesterone can promote bone rebuilding, rather than just slowing its loss. Although I have spoken about | |||
progesterone and osteoporosis frequently in the last 25 years, I have only occasionally considered what estrogen | |||
does to bones; generally, I described estrogen as a stress-promoting and age-promoting hormone. In the 1970s, | |||
pointing out progesterone's protective antagonism to excessive amounts of other hormones, and that the catabolic | |||
glucocorticoids tend to increase with aging, I began referring to progesterone as the "anticatabolic" hormone | |||
that should be used to prevent stress-induced atrophy of skin, bones, brain, etc. A former editor of Yearbook of | |||
Endocrinology had reviewed a series of studies showing that excess prolactin can cause osteoporosis. Then, he | |||
presented a group of studies showing how estrogen promotes the secretion of prolactin, and can cause | |||
hyperprolactinemia. In that review, he wryly wondered how something that increases something that causes | |||
osteoporosis could prevent osteoporosis. Women have a higher incidence of osteoporosis than men do. Young women | |||
have thinner more delicate bones than young men. The women who break bones in old age are generally the women | |||
who had the thinnest bones in youth. Menstrual irregularities, and luteal defects, that involve relatively high | |||
estrogen and low progesterone, increase bone loss. Fatter women are less likely to break bones than thinner | |||
women. Insulin, which causes the formation of fat, also stimulates bone growth. Estrogen however, increases the | |||
level of free fatty acids in the blood, indicating that it antagonizes insulin (insulin decreases the level of | |||
free fatty acids), and the fatty acids themselves strongly oppose the effects of insulin. Estrogen dominance is | |||
widely thought to predispose women to diabetes. Between the ages of 20 and 40, there is a very considerable | |||
increase in the blood level of estrogen in women. However, bone loss begins around the age of 23, and progesses | |||
through the years when estrogen levels are rising. Osteoarthritis, which involves degeneration of the bones | |||
around joints, is strongly associated with high levels of estrogen, and can be produced in animals with estrogen | |||
treatment. Thirty years ago, when people were already claiming that estrogen would prevent or cure osteoporosis, | |||
endocrinologists pointed out that there was no x-ray evidence to support the claim. Estrogen can cause a | |||
positive calcium balance, the retention of more calcium than is excreted, and the estrogen promoters argued that | |||
this showed it was being stored in the bones, but the endocrine physiologists showed that estrogen causes the | |||
retention of calcium by soft tissues. There are many reasons for not wanting calcium to accumulate in the soft | |||
tissues; this occurs normally in aging and stress. Then, it was discovered that, although estrogen doesn't | |||
improve the activity of the cells that build bone, it can reduce the activity of the cells that remove bone, the | |||
osteoclasts. The osteoclast is a type of phagocytic cell, and is considered to be a macrophage, the type of cell | |||
that can be found in any organ, which can eat any sort of particle, and which secretes substances (cytokines, | |||
hormone-like proteins) that modify the functions of other cells. When estrogen was found to impair the activity | |||
of this kind of cell, there wasn't much known about macrophage cytokines. With the clear evidence that estrogen | |||
inhibits the osteoclasts without activating the bone-building osteoblasts, estrogen was said to "prevent bone | |||
loss," and from that point on we never heard again about estrogen promoting a positive calcium balance. Calcium | |||
retention by soft tissues has come to be an accepted marker of tissue aging, tissue damage, excitotoxicity, and | |||
degeneration. Positive calcium balance had been the essence of the argument for using estrogen to prevent | |||
osteoporosis: "Women are like chickens, estrogen makes them store calcium in their bones." But if everyone now | |||
recognizes that calcium isn't being stored in bones, it's better for the estrogen industry if we forget about | |||
the clearly established positive calcium balance produced by estrogen. The toxic effects of excessive | |||
intracellular calcium (decreased respiration and increased excitation) are opposed by magnesium. Both thyroid | |||
and progesterone improve magnesium retention. Estrogen dominance is often associated with magnesium deficiency, | |||
which can be an important factor in osteoporosis (Abraham and Grewal, 1990; Muneyyirci-Delale, et al., 1999). As | |||
part of the campaign to get women to use estrogen, an x-ray (bone density) test was devised which can supposedly | |||
measure changes in the mineral content of bone. However, it happens that fat and water interfere with the | |||
measurements. Estrogen changes the fat and water content of tissues. By chance, the distortions produced by fat | |||
and water happen to be such that estrogen could appear to be increasing the density of a bone, when it is really | |||
just altering the soft tissues. Ultrasound measurements can provide very accurate measurements of bone density, | |||
without the fat and water artifacts that can produce misleading results in the x-ray procedure, and don't expose | |||
the patient to radiation, but the ultrasound method is seldom used. In recent years, there has been quite a lot | |||
of research into the effects of the macrophage cytokines. Immune therapy for cancer was considered quackery when | |||
Lawrence Burton identified some substances in blood serum that could cause massive tumors in rodents to | |||
disappear in just a few hours. One of the serum factors was called Tumor Necrosis Factor, TNF. An official | |||
committee was formed to evaluate his work, but it reported that there was nothing to it. A member of the | |||
committee later became known as "the authority" on tumor necrosis factor, which was thought to have great | |||
potential as an anticancer drug. However, used by itself, TNF killed only a few cancers, but it damaged every | |||
organ of the body, usually causing the tissues to waste away. Other names, lymphotoxin and cachectin, reflected | |||
its toxic actions on healthy tissues. Aging involves many changes that tend to increase the inflammatory | |||
reaction, and generally the level of TNF increases with aging. Although cancer, heart failure, AIDS, and extreme | |||
hormone deficiency (from loss of the pituitary or thyroid gland, for example) can cause cachexia of an extreme | |||
and rapid sort, ordinary aging is itself a type of cachexia. Progeria, or premature aging, is a kind of wasting | |||
disease that causes a child's tissues (including bones) to atrophy, and to change in many of the ways that would | |||
normally occur in extreme old age. Recent studies have found that both men and women lose minerals from their | |||
bones at the rate of about 1% per year. Although men have lower estrogen in youth than women do, their bones are | |||
much heavier. During aging, as their bones get thinner, men's estrogen levels keep rising. Besides having weaker | |||
bones, old people have weaker muscles, and are more likely to injure themselves in a fall because their muscles | |||
don't react as well. Muscle loss occurs at about the rate of 1% per year. Women's muscles, like their bones, are | |||
normally smaller than men's, and estrogen contributes significantly to these differences. TNF can produce very | |||
rapid loss of tissue including bone, and in general, it rises with aging. Some of the people who like to say | |||
that "osteoporosis is caused by estrogen deficiency" know about the destructive actions of TNF, and argue that | |||
it rises at menopause "because of estrogen deficiency." There are very good reasons for rejecting that argument; | |||
the experiments sometimes seem to have been designed purely for propaganda purposes, using toxic levels of | |||
estrogen for a specific result. One researcher noted that the effects of estrogen on cells in vitro are | |||
biphasic: Low doses increased TNF, high doses decreased TNF. Everyone knows that unphysiologically high doses | |||
(50 or 100 or more times above the physiological level of around 0.25 micrograms per liter) of estrogen are | |||
toxic to cells, producing functional and structural changes, and even rapid death. So, when a researcher who | |||
wants to show estrogen's "bone protective" effect of lowering TNF adds a lethal dose of estrogen to his cell | |||
culture, he can conclude that "estrogen inhibits TNF production." But the result is no more interesting than the | |||
observation that a large dose of cyanide inhibits breathing. TNF is produced by endotoxin, and estrogen | |||
increases the amount of endotoxin in the blood. Even without endotoxin, though, estrogen can stimulate the | |||
production of TNF. Lactic acid and unsaturated fats and hypoxia can stimulate increased formation of TNF. | |||
Estrogen increases production of nitric oxide systemically, and nitric oxide can stimulate TNF formation. How | |||
does TNF work, to produce tissue damage and wasting? It causes cells to take up too much calcium, which makes | |||
them hypermetabolic before it kills them. It increases formation of nitric oxide and carbon monoxide, blocking | |||
respiration. TNF can cause a 19.5 fold increased in the enzyme which produces carbon monoxide (Rizzardini, et | |||
al., 1993), which blocks respiration. All of the normal conditions associated with high estrogen also are found | |||
to involve increased production of TNF, and treatment of animals with estrogen clearly increases their TNF. | |||
Premature ovarian failure (with low estrogen levels) leads to reduced TNF, as does treatment with antiestrogens. | |||
If bone resorption is significantly regulated by TNF, then it should be concluded that increased estrogenic | |||
influence will tend to produce osteoporosis. Tamoxifen, which has some estrogenic effects, including the | |||
inhibition of osteoclasts, can kill osteoclasts when the dose is high enough. The inhibition of osteoclast | |||
activity by either estrogen or tamoxifen is probably a toxic action, that has been characterized as "beneficial" | |||
by the estrogen industry simply because they didn't have any better argument for getting women to use their | |||
products. Some types of dementia, such as Alzheimer's disease, involve a life-long process of degeneration of | |||
the brain, with an inflammatory component, that probably makes them comparable to osteoporosis and | |||
muscle-wasting. (In the brain, the microglia, which are similar to macrophages, and the astrocytes, can produce | |||
TNF.) The importance of the inflammatory process in Alzheimer's disease was appreciated when it was noticed that | |||
people who used aspirin regularly had a low incidence of that dementia. Aspirin inhibits the formation of TNF, | |||
and aspirin has been found to retard bone loss. In the case of osteoporosis (A. Murrillo-Uribe, 1999), as in | |||
Alzheimer's disease, the incidence is two or three times as high in women as in men. In both Alzheimer's disease | |||
and osteoporosis, the estrogen industry is arguing that the problems are caused by a suddenly developing | |||
estrogen deficiency, rather than by prolonged exposure to estrogen. Similar arguments were made fifty years ago | |||
regarding the nature of the menopause itself--that it was caused by a sudden decrease in estrogen production. | |||
The evidence that has accumulated in the last forty years has decisively settled that argument: Menopause is the | |||
result of prolonged exposure to estrogen. (Even one large dose destroys certain areas in the brain, and chronic, | |||
natural levels damage the nerves that regulate the pituitary. Overactivity of the pituitary leads to many other | |||
features of aging.) The links between estrogen and TNF appear to be essential factors in aging and its diseases. | |||
Each of these substances has its constructive, but limited, place in normal physiology, but as excitatory | |||
factors, they must operate within the appropriate constraints. The basic constraint is that resources, including | |||
energy and oxygen, must be available to terminate their excitatory actions. Adequate oxygen, a generous supply | |||
of carbon dioxide, saturated fats, thyroid, and progesterone restrain TNF, while optimizing other cytokines and | |||
immune functions, including thymic protection. In the development of the organism and its adaptive functions, | |||
there are patterned processes, functional systems, that can clarify the interactions of growth and atrophy. The | |||
respiratory production of energy and carbon dioxide, and the respiratory defect in which lactic acid is | |||
produced, correspond to successful adaptation, and to stressful/excitotoxic maladaptation, respectively. | |||
Excitotoxicity, and Meerson's work on the protective functions of the antistress hormones, have to be understood | |||
in this framework. This framework integrates the understanding of cancer metabolism with the other stress | |||
metabolisms, and with the metabolism of normal growth. Unsaturated fats, iron, and lactic acid are closely | |||
related to the actions and regulation of TNF, and therefore they strongly influence the nature of stress and the | |||
rate of aging. The fact that cancer depends on the presence of polyunsaturated fats probably relates to the | |||
constructive and destructive actions of TNF: The destructive effects such as multiple organ failure/congestive | |||
heart failure/shock-lung, etc., apparently involve arachidonic acid and its metabolites, which are based on the | |||
so-called essential fatty acids. When oxygen and the correct nutrients are available, the hypermetabolism | |||
produced by TNF could be reparative (K. Fukushima, et al., 1999), rather than destructive. Stimulation in the | |||
presence of oxygen produces carbon dioxide, allowing cells to excrete calcium and to deposit it in bones, but | |||
stimulation in the absence of oxygen produces lactic acid and causes cellular calcium uptake. It is in this | |||
context that the therapeutic effects of saturated fats, carbon dioxide, progesterone, and thyroid can be | |||
understood. They restore stability to a system that has been stimulated beyond its capacity to adapt without | |||
injury. | |||
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trends in the osteoporotic fractures of the distal humerus in elderly women. Palvanen M, Kannus P, Niemi S, | |||
Parkkari J. Biochem J 1993 Mar 1;290 ( Pt 2):343-7. Cytokine induction of haem oxygenase mRNA in mouse liver. | |||
Interleukin 1 transcriptionally activates the haem oxygenase gene. Rizzardini M, Terao M, Falciani F, Cantoni L. | |||
Nitric Oxide 1997;1(6):453-62..Effects of female hormones (17beta-estradiol and progesterone) on nitric oxide | |||
production by alveolar macrophages in rats. Robert R, Spitzer JA. Nitric Oxide 1997;1(6):453-62.. Effects of | |||
female hormones (17beta-estradiol and progesterone) on nitric oxide production by alveolar macrophages in rats. | |||
Robert R, Spitzer JA. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 1998 Jan;53(1):M20-6. Monocyte cytokine production in an | |||
elderly population: effect of age and inflammation. Roubenoff R, Harris TB, Abad LW, Wilson PW, Dallal GE, | |||
Dinarello CA. "OBJECTIVE: To determine the association among aging, inflammation, and cytokine production by | |||
peripheral blood mononuclear cells." "We examined production of interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), tumor necrosis | |||
factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra), and IL-6 in 711 elderly participants in the | |||
Framingham Heart Study (mean age, 79 y) and 21 young healthy volunteers (mean age, 39 y)." CONCLUSION: | |||
"Production of IL-6 and IL-1Ra--but not IL-1 beta or TNF-alpha--was increased in the elderly compared to | |||
healthy, young subjects. The increase in IL-6 also correlated with increased production of CRP, a marker of | |||
inflammation. However, IL-1Ra was increased in the elderly independently of CRP production. Although limited by | |||
the small control group, these data suggest that dysregulation of some inflammatory cytokines occurs with age, | |||
but the role of inflammation in aging remains unclear." J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 1998 Jan;53(1):M20-6. | |||
MMonocyte cytokine production in an elderly population: effect of age and inflammation. Roubenoff R, Harris TB, | |||
Abad LW, Wilson PW, Dallal GE, Dinarello CA. Br J Cancer Suppl 1996 Jul;27:S133-5. The influence of oxygen and | |||
carbon dioxide tension on the production of TNF alpha by activated macrophages. Sampson LE, Chaplin DJ. Mech | |||
Ageing Dev 1997 Feb;93(1-3):87-94. Calorie restriction inhibits the age-related dysregulation of the cytokines | |||
TNF-alpha and IL-6 in C3B10RF1 mice. Spaulding CC, Walford RL, Effros RB. "TNF-alpha and IL-6 are generally | |||
increased in the sera of aged humans and mice. The dysregulation of these cytokines may be critical in | |||
autoreactivity and immune dysfunction." "Serum levels of both cytokines were significantly higher in old versus | |||
young mice. However, in old mice subjected to long term CR the serum levels were comparable to those of young | |||
mice. The potential involvement of normalization of TNF-alpha and IL-6 levels in the life extension effect of CR | |||
are discussed." Cytokine 1999 May; 11(5):326-33. Induction of haem oxygenase contributes to the synthesis of | |||
pro-inflammatory cytokines in re-oxygenated rat macrophages: role of cGMP. Tamion F, Richard V, Lyoumi S, Hiron | |||
M, Bonmarchand G, Leroy J, Daveau M, Thuillez C, Lebreton JP. Clin Sci (Colch) 1994 Aug;87(2):173-8. Complex | |||
modulation of cytokine induction by endotoxin and tumour necrosis factor from peritoneal macrophages of rats by | |||
diets containing fats of different saturated, monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acid composition. Tappia | |||
PS, Grimble RF. Infect Immun 1996 Mar;64(3):769-74. Lipopolysaccharide-induced lethality and cytokine production | |||
in aged mice. Tateda K, Matsumoto T, Miyazaki S, Yamaguchi K Hepatology 2000 Jan;31(1):117-23. Estrogen is | |||
involved in early alcohol-induced liver injury in a rat enteral feeding model. Yin M, Ikejima K, Wheeler MD, | |||
Bradford BU, Seabra V, Forman DT, Sato N, Thurman RG. "Blood endotoxin and hepatic levels of CD14 messenger RNA | |||
(mRNA) and protein were increased by ethanol. This effect was blocked in ovariectomized rats and elevated by | |||
estrogen replacement. Moreover, Kupffer cells isolated from ethanol-treated rats with estrogen replacement | |||
produced more tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) than those from control and ovariectomized rats. It is | |||
concluded, therefore, that the sensitivity of rat liver to alcohol-induced injury is directly related to | |||
estrogen, which increases endotoxin in the blood and CD14 expression in the liver, leading to increased | |||
TNF-alpha production." Shock 1998 Dec;10(6):436-41. Acetazolamide treatment prevents in vitro | |||
endotoxin-stimulated tumor necrosis factor release in mouse macrophages. West MA, LeMieur TL, Hackam D, | |||
Bellingham J, Claire L, Rodriguez JL. Hepatology 2000 Jan;31(1):117-23. Estrogen is involved in early | |||
alcohol-induced liver injury in a rat enteral feeding model. Yin M, Ikejima K, Wheeler MD, Bradford BU, Seabra | |||
V, Forman DT, Sato N, Thurman RG Anim Reprod Sci 1998 Feb 27;50(1-2):57-67. Elevation in tumour necrosis | |||
factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) messenger RNA levels in the uterus of pregnant gilts after oestrogen treatment. Yu Z, | |||
Gordon JR, Kendall J, Thacker PA Immunology 1995 Sep;86(1):18-24. In vivo modulation of murine serum tumour | |||
necrosis factor and interleukin-6 levels during endotoxemia by oestrogen agonists and antagonists. Zuckerman SH, | |||
Bryan-Poole N, Evans GF, Short L, Glasebrook AL. "Oestrogen treatment resulted in a significant increase in | |||
serum TNF while serum IL-6 levels, relative to the placebo group, decreased in response to an endotoxin | |||
challenge." Inflammation 1996 Dec;20(6):581-97. Estriol: a potent regulator of TNF and IL-6 expression in a | |||
murine model of endotoxemia. Zuckerman SH, Ahmari SE, Bryan-Poole N, Evans GF, Short L, Glasebrook AL. Proc | |||
Assoc Am Physicians 1996 Mar;108(2):155-64 Potential mechanism of estrogen-mediated decrease in bone formation: | |||
estrogen increases production of inhibitory insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-4. Kassem M, Okazaki R, | |||
De Leon D, Harris SA, Robinson JA, Spelsberg TC, Conover CA, Riggs BL. | |||
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© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<strong>Fatigue, aging, and recuperation</strong> | |||
<strong></strong> | |||
<hr />- Old people and sick people tire easily. Surprisingly, little is known to explain that common fact.- | |||
Myths about lactic acid and oxygen debt have misdirected most fatigue research.- The cellular processes involved | |||
in fatigue overlap with those of aging.- Knowledge about the mechanisms of fatigue should be useful in | |||
preventing some tissue swelling disorders, organ failure, degenerative calcification, and other energy-related | |||
problems. <hr />GLOSSARY:* Uncoupling--In cellular respiration, oxidation of "fuel" in the mitochondrion is | |||
coupled to the phosphorylation of ADP, forming ATP. Uncouplers are chemicals that allow oxidation to proceed | |||
without producing the usual amount of ATP.* DNP--Dinitrophenol, an uncoupler that was once popular as a | |||
weight-loss drug.* NAD+ and NADH--Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, and its reduced form are coenzymes for many | |||
oxidation and reduction reactions in cells.* Hyperammonemia--The presence of too much ammonia in the blood.* | |||
Vicinal water--water near surfaces, especially hydrophobic surfaces, that is physically and chemically different | |||
from ordinary water.* Hydrophobic--insoluble in water, a nonpolar oil-like molecule that repels water.<hr | |||
/>Unlike the somewhat technical medical concept of "stress," the idea of fatigue is something everyone | |||
understands, to some extent. Hans Selye's studies of stress weren't widely accepted until about 40 years after | |||
their publication, but some of the main investigators of the fatigue phenomenon are still practically unknown in | |||
the universities, many years after they published their work. Several things have kept fatigue research | |||
from advancing, including the common feeling that fatigue is already sufficiently understood, and that it is | |||
somehow trivial, compared to problems such as growth, reproduction, and disease.Fatigue is usually described as | |||
decreased responsiveness resulting from over-exertion: For example, a muscle's decreased strength or speed of | |||
contraction, or a nerve's decreased speed of conduction, or a sense organ's decreased ability to detect or to | |||
discriminate. Another meaning of fatigue, a decreased resistance or strength, can be applied to materials, as | |||
well as to some biological functions, for example when fatigue leads to sickness or | |||
infections. "Responsiveness" implies sensitivity, and decreased sensitivity to stimulation can be seen in | |||
fatigued sense organs, nerves, muscles, and many other types of cell--immune cells, secretory cells, etc. Even | |||
plant cells have very similar processes of excitability that can be depleted by repetition.In a series of | |||
lectures to the Royal Society in England (1895-1901), the physicist Jagadis Chandra Bose described work that at | |||
first excited, and then disturbed, many physicists and biologists. He had invented devices for both producing | |||
and detecting electromagnetic waves, and he had been the first to produce millimeter length radio waves | |||
(microwaves). In Marconi's first transatlantic radio transmission Bose's signal detecting device was used. This | |||
device was based on the fact that two pieces of metal in superficial contact became electrically fused (cohered) | |||
in the presence of an electrical or electromagnetic field. After they cohered, a mechanical shock would separate | |||
them, breaking the electrical fusion.When Bose was experimenting with his "self-restoring coherer," a | |||
semiconducting device that spontaneously broke the connection without being mechanically shaken, he observed | |||
that it became insensitive after prolonged use, that is, it lost its self-restoring capacity, but that after a | |||
rest, it recovered its sensitivity. He recognized the complex behavior of his instrument as being very similar | |||
to the electrical physiology of living cells.He then began a series of experiments on plants, animals, and | |||
minerals, that showed similar responses to all kinds of stimulation, including mechanical and thermal and | |||
electromagnetic.The idea of metal fatigue wasn't new, but Bose was able to think far beyond the ideas of the | |||
metallurgists. Biologists were thinking of electrical responsiveness as a defining feature of life, and Bose | |||
demonstrated that plants had electrical responsiveness very similar to that of animals, but also that similar | |||
reactions could be demonstrated in minerals.This was what disturbed the English scientists. Sensitivity, | |||
irritability, fatigue, and memory were supposed to be special properties related to life, and maybe to | |||
consciousness. For the Englishmen, there were religious implications in this Hindu's research.There were several | |||
reasons that European and American scientists couldn't accept the universal nature of the electrical properties | |||
that they were studying in animals. One of their motives was to see life as something immaterial, or of an | |||
absolutely different nature than inorganic matter. Another problem had to do with the developing belief that the | |||
special properties of life were enclosed in the hereditary substance of each cell, and that the electrical | |||
functions of cells were produced entirely by the presence of a membrane, surrounding a drop of water containing | |||
randomly moving dissolved chemicals. For the membrane electricity theory, it was essential to believe in | |||
the random behavior of things dissolved in the cell water.So they considered the electrical-mechanical reactions | |||
and interactions of minerals to be so unlike the processes of life that it was inappropriate to see analogies | |||
between them. Minerals were composed of atoms, and, according to the doctrine of the time, they could have no | |||
"physiological" functions except on the atomic scale. It was more than 20 years before mainstream physicists | |||
began thinking about "delocalized" forces and fields in minerals. Between 1915 and 1934, Michael Polanyi | |||
made many observations that made it clear that the old kind of electrical atomism was completely unfounded. The | |||
behavior of mineral crystals, and the interactions between different phases of material, such as gas or liquid | |||
with a solid, could be understood only in terms of relatively long-range forces. Polanyi's experiments showed, | |||
for example, that events on the surface of a crystal modified the strength and deformability of the | |||
crystal. Many others between 1900 and 1940-- Lepeschkin, Nasonov, Bungenberg de Jong, and Solco Tromp, for | |||
example--argued that the sensitivity of protoplasm had to be understood in terms of long range order, something | |||
like a liquid crystalline state of matter that would require some of the kinds of knowledge of matter that were | |||
being developed by physicists, metallurgists, and a variety of others investigating the condensed states of | |||
matter.But the mainstream biologists preferred to describe cells in terms that would make impossible any of the | |||
responsivities or sensitivities seen in the "simple" solid state of minerals. To defend their ideology of the | |||
immateriality of life, they denied that the subtlest features of matter had anything to do with life, reducing | |||
life to a debased set of special, merely theoretical, mechanisms. The now defunct physical theory of merely | |||
localized atomic electrical forces became the paradigm for the new biology. The many demonstrations of coherent, | |||
ordered physical behavior of the cytoplasm, for example Gurwitch's mitogenic radiation, were dismissed with | |||
prejudice. During G. W. Crile's long career (1889-1941), understanding shock, biological energy, and | |||
fatigue were his main concerns. He believed that shock was the result of brain exhaustion, and in one of his | |||
last publications he showed that the brains from exhausted animals produced less bioluminescence than those from | |||
rested animals. His importance was in demonstrating that fatigue and shock are systemic conditions of the | |||
organism, rather than isolated events in muscles and nerves. Recent publications are showing the validity of | |||
this view. Crile's approach to the prevention and treatment of shock was based on isolating the damaged area | |||
with local anesthetics. Blocking the nerves from one injured part of the body, for example the sciatic nerve in | |||
the leg, could preserve energy production (and normal cell functions) throughout the rest of the body.About 30 | |||
years earlier (1901), Vvedensky had demonstrated that some types of fatigue appear to be a defensive blocking of | |||
responsiveness, such that intense stimulation would produce no response, while weak stimulation could sometimes | |||
produce a response. These changes affected cell functions in a variety of ways, that he called narcosis and | |||
parabiosis.There have been two popular ways to "explain" fatigue, one by saying that the cell's energy (usually | |||
thought of as ATP or glycogen) is used up, the other saying that the accumulation of a metabolic product | |||
(usually lactic acid) prevents further functioning. The obvious problem with these explanations is that the | |||
fatigue response is quite independent of those metabolic changes. Another problem is that those ideas don't | |||
explain the real changes that occur in cells that are demonstrating fatigue.Fatigued cells take up water, and | |||
become heavier. They also become more permeable, and leak. When more oxygen is made available, they are less | |||
resistant to fatigue, and when the organism is made slightly hypoxic, as at high altitude, muscles have more | |||
endurance, and are stronger, and nerves conduct more quickly. These facts don't fit with the standard model of | |||
the cell, in which its sensitivity is strictly governed by the behavior of its "membrane." (For example, how can | |||
a membrane leak large molecules at the same time that it is intact and causing the cell to swell osmotically?) | |||
They are consistent with the model of the cell that treats protoplasm as a special phase of matter.Another | |||
feature of fatigue (and often of aging, stress, and sickness) is that the relaxation of muscles is retarded and | |||
impaired.Hypothyroidism causes muscle relaxation to be slowed, both in skeletal muscles and in the heart. F/Z. | |||
Meerson showed that stress causes heart muscles to be exposed to increased calcium, followed by breakdown of | |||
fats and proteins, and that these changes keep the injured heart in a continuous state of partial contraction, | |||
making it stiff, and resistant to complete contractile shortening. When many cardiologists talk about the | |||
heart's stiffness, they are thinking of muscular thickening and fibrosis, but those are late consequences of the | |||
kind of contractile, unrelaxed stiffness that Meerson described.The hypothyroid heart does eventually become | |||
fibrotic, but before that, it is just unable to relax properly, and unable to contract fully. This failure to | |||
empty fully with each contraction is a kind of "heart failure," but it can be corrected very quickly by | |||
supplementing thyroid. Even the fibrotic heart can recover under the influence of adequate thyroid.The analogy | |||
of the "coherer" would suggest that the overstimulated muscle isn't able to decohere itself, until it has had a | |||
rest. It responds to stimulation, lets the energy flow, but then can't turn it off, and the energy keeps | |||
flowing, because of a change in physical state. Albert Szent-Gyorgyi was probably the first person to | |||
seriously investigate the semiconducting properties of living material. Since he was aware of W.F. Koch's idea | |||
of a free radical catalyst to support oxidative metabolism, his suggestion in 1941 that cellular proteins could | |||
function as electrical conductors (or semiconductors) was very likely based on his research in cellular | |||
respiration, as well as on his work with muscle proteins. He had observed that ATP lowers the viscosity of a | |||
solution of the muscle protein myosin, and that it would cause a filament formed by precipitating myosin to | |||
contract. The polymerization and contraction of proteins under the influence of free radicals was at the heart | |||
of F.W. Koch's therapeutic ideas, but Koch's work was about 100 years too early, by medical | |||
standards.Szent-Gyorgyi observed that, although ATP was involved in the contraction of muscles, its post-mortem | |||
disappearance caused the contraction and hardening of muscles known as rigor mortis. When he put hardened dead | |||
muscles into a solution of ATP, they relaxed and softened. The relaxed state is a state with adequate energy | |||
reserves.After Szent-Gyorgyi moved to the U.S., in 1947, he demonstrated the effect of muscle cytoplasm on the | |||
behavior of fluorescent substances, which was analogous to that of ice, until the muscle was stimulated. During | |||
contraction, the fluorescent material behaved as it would in ordinary liquid water. This effect involved the | |||
stabilization of the excited state of electrons. This single demonstration should have caused biologists to | |||
abandon the membrane theory of cellular excitation, and to return to basic physics for their understanding of | |||
cell behavior. The implications of Szent-Gyorgyi's work were enormous for biology and medicine, and even for the | |||
understanding of semiconductors, but most of the world was hypnotized by a simple textbook model of cell | |||
membranes.Szent-Gyorgyi also demonstrated that the combination of properly balanced electron donors and electron | |||
acceptors (D-A pairs) would cause a muscle to contract. He compared this to "doping" an inorganic | |||
superconductor, to regulate its electronic behavior. Although these experiments were done half a century after | |||
Koch's application of free radical chemistry to medicine, they still didn't rouse the pharmaceutical industry | |||
from its toxic slumber.I suspect that it was Szent-Gyorgyi's research with those interesting electronic | |||
properties of cellular water and proteins that in 1960 gave Linus Pauling the idea to explain anesthesia, | |||
specifically noble gas anesthesia, in terms of water clathrate formation, the restructuring of cellular water by | |||
the hydrophobic atom or molecule of an anesthetic. His suggestion caused a reaction among biologists that | |||
discouraged research into the subject for about 40 years.Gilbert Ling's view of cytoplasmic structure gives a | |||
different emphasis to the function of electrons, which I think is an essential complement to Szent-Gyorgyi's | |||
view. Ling's emphasis is on how the inductive effect of adsorbed substances (for example, ATP and progesterone | |||
has powerful adsorptive effects) on proteins changes the charge concentration on ionizable groups. When the | |||
charge concentration is in one configuration (more acidic), the preferred counterion is potassium, and in | |||
another (less acidic) configuration, it is sodium. Gilbert Ling's biophysical calculations were useful to | |||
physical chemists, and were soon put to practical use for understanding ion exchange resins, such as water | |||
softeners. Many sorts of evidence showed their validity for cell physiology, but nearly all biologists rejected | |||
them, preferring to talk about membranes, pumps, and channels, despite the evidence showing that the properties | |||
ascribed to those are simply impossible. NMR imaging (MRI) was developed by Raymond Damadian specifically as an | |||
application of Ling's description of cell physiology.Although metals are conductors, the function of the | |||
coherers of Bose and others shows that the surface is a semiconductor, that requires the slight excitation of an | |||
electromagnetic wave to become conductive, at which point the conduction band of electrons in the metal becomes | |||
coherent and extends from one particle into the others. The surface of any phase of a substance has electronic | |||
properties distinct from those of the bulk phase, and in a sense the interface constitutes a special phase of | |||
matter. When the electrons of the interface lose their special properties, the structure of the whole | |||
system changes.When a muscle cell is stimulated enough to cause a contraction, the interruption of its resting | |||
phase causes a shift in the charge concentration on the proteins, potassium ions are exchanged for sodium ions, | |||
calcium ions enter, and phosphate ions separate from ATP, and are replaced by the transfer of phosphate to ADP | |||
from creatine phosphate. Since the quantum physicist E. Schroedinger wrote his book, Time's Arrow, people | |||
have often thought of life in terms of negentropy, going against the general tendency of entropy to increase, | |||
except for aging and death, which are seen as obeying a law of increasing entropy. But A. Zotin investigated | |||
organisms, rather than abstractions about electrons, and shows that aging involves a decrease in entropy, and a | |||
slowing of metabolism. The decrease of entropy with aging, according to his view, would be analogous to | |||
crystallization, a sort of progressive freezing.When a nerve is stimulated, it releases energy suddenly, and | |||
much of this heat seems to be the result of a change of structure in the cytoplasm, since (in crustaceans' | |||
nerves, which can function at low temperature) during the resting recovery of the nerve, its temperature goes | |||
slightly below the ambient temperature, despite the release of some heat from the chemical changes of | |||
metabolism, stimulated by the nerve's activity. When a physical change is endothermic, as the nerve's | |||
recovery is, that can be interpreted as an increase in overall entropy, as when a rubber band spontaneously | |||
contracts, and becomes cooler.Bose's rested coherer, which, with time, spontaneously recovered its | |||
semiconductive (i.e., relatively insulating) property, wasn't being powered by metabolism. As the particles | |||
returned to their relatively isolated state, there was a decrease of order, and the change was probably somewhat | |||
like the spontaneous energy change in the stimulated crustacean nerve. I assume the change would result from the | |||
absorption of environmental heat, possibly with infrared resonance with electron conduction bands.Seeing the | |||
structure of the cytoplasm as something like a spring-driven mechanism, able to bounce between two states or | |||
"phases," makes it easier to see cellular fatigue as something different from the various metabolic energy | |||
sources, ATP, glycogen, and oxygen, which--contrary to conventional assumptions--aren't closely tied to the | |||
functional losses occurring in fatigue.The role of metabolism, then, becomes analogous to the role of the | |||
"tapper" in the early forms of the coherer.Water in its normal state is a dielectric. But when it is polarized | |||
by an electrical charge, or by the presence of a phase boundary, its normal state is altered. This is the | |||
special interfacial water, or vicinal water. With the movement of ions (mainly potassium, sodium, calcium, and | |||
magnesium) during excitation, the state of the cellular water is necessarily changed by the presence of | |||
different substances. In the excited state, cell water is less hydrophobic, more hydrophilic than in the relaxed | |||
state. A network of "hydrophobic" interactions extends through the relaxed cell. One of the properties of a | |||
dielectric is that it tends to move into the space between charges, with a force similar in principle to that | |||
involved in dielectrophoresis. In the resting state, potassium is the main inorganic ion, and it is | |||
associated with acidic groups, such as aspartic and glutamic acid. During excitation, potassium is partly | |||
exchanged for sodium, which becomes the preferred counter-ion for the acid groups, and calcium enters the cell | |||
along with the sodium. Potassium's interaction with water is very weak (its hydration has been called negative), | |||
allowing water to form the structures that are stable in the presence of hydrophobic surfaces. Sodium and | |||
especially calcium (smaller atoms, with higher surface charge concentration) powerfully interact with water | |||
molecules, more strongly than water interacts with itself, disrupting the delicate somewhat hydrophobic | |||
structures of the intracellular water.(Calcium, with its two charges, has important binding and stabilizing | |||
functions in the resting cell. In the excited cell, these internal calcium ions are released, while | |||
extracellular calcium ions enter the cell.)With the increased movement of charged particles during the | |||
stimulation of a nerve or muscle, as one kind of counterion is exchanged for another, and the destruction of | |||
some of the water's structure, there are more opportunities for bulk dielectric water to enter cells, | |||
interfering with the arrangement of proteins, and tending to cause swelling and separation of the structural | |||
elements of the cell. Electron micrographs of fatigued muscle show a remarkable separation of the actin and | |||
myosin proteins.In the excited state, NMR studies show that cell water behaves more like bulk water, that is, | |||
its molecular movements are relatively free, indicating the momentary loss of the interfacial state. In this | |||
state, the uptake of water, and the fatigue-related swelling of nerves and muscles, would be driven at least | |||
partly by the principle that a dielectric tends to be pulled into the spaces separating charges. The bulk water | |||
that enters a cell during the breakdown of vicinal water functions as an extraneous material somewhat beyond the | |||
cell's control.These bulk-like high dielectric properties of water in the excited cellular state can explain | |||
many changes of enzyme activity. Previously nonpolar lipids would develop a negative surface charge (from | |||
accumulating hydroxyl groups: Marinova, et al., 1996), which would tend to increase their oxidation and | |||
degradation. With the loss of the interfacial water, the cell's high energy resting state is replaced by an | |||
active mobilization of its resources, to maintain and restore the cell's structure. Metabolic energy begins to | |||
flow into the processes of restoration, serving the function of the tapper in the earliest coherers.Looking at | |||
fatigability, muscle contraction, and nerve conduction in a variety of situations, we can test some of the | |||
traditional explanations, and see how well the newer "bioelectronic" explanations fits the facts. Osmotic | |||
pressure, hydrostatic pressure, atmospheric pressure, and the degree of metabolic stimulation by thyroid hormone | |||
affect fatigue in ways that aren't consistent with the membrane-electrical doctrine.The production of lactic | |||
acid during intense muscle activity led some people to suggest that fatigue occurred when the muscle wasn't | |||
getting enough oxygen, but experiments show that fatigue sets in while adequate oxygen is being delivered to the | |||
muscle. Underwater divers sometimes get an excess of oxygen, and that often causes muscle fatigue and soreness. | |||
At high altitudes, where there is relatively little oxygen, strength and endurance can increase.An excess of | |||
oxygen can slow nerve conduction, while hypoxia can accelerate it. (Increasing the delivery of oxygen at higher | |||
pressure doesn't increase the cellular use of oxygen or decrease lactic acid production in the exercising muscle | |||
[Kohzuki, et al., 2000], but it will increase lipid peroxidation.)High hydrostatic pressure causes muscles to | |||
contract, though for many years the membrane-doctrinaires couldn't accept that. Underwater divers experience | |||
brain excitation under very high pressure. Since vicinal water has a larger volume than ordinary water | |||
(analogous to the expansion when ice is formed, though the volume increase in cell water is slightly less, about | |||
4%, than in ice, which is 11% more voluminous than liquid water), compression under high pressure converts | |||
vicinal cell water to the state that occurs in the excited cell, the way ice melts under pressure. The excited | |||
state exists as long as water remains in that state.These changes of state under pressure are reminiscent of | |||
Bose's use of pressure in some of his coherers, and of the fact that pressure alters the sensitivity of | |||
electrons in a semiconductor, by altering their "band gap," the amount of energy needed to make them enter the | |||
conductive zone.One of the early demonstrations that cell water undergoes a phase change during muscle | |||
contraction involved simply measuring the volume of an isolated muscle. With stimulation and contraction, the | |||
volume of the muscle decreases slightly. (The muscle was immersed in water in a sealed chamber, and the volume | |||
decrease in the whole chamber was measured.) This corresponds to the conversion of vicinal water to | |||
bulk-like (dielectric) water. (The threatening implications of those experiments with spontaneous volume | |||
change were very annoying to many biologists of my professors' generation.)In the stimulated state, the cell's | |||
uptake of water from its environment coincides closely with its electrical and thermal activity, and its | |||
expulsion of water coincides with its recovery. In a small nerve fiber, or near the surface of a larger fiber, | |||
these changes are very fast, and in a large muscle the uptake of water is faster than the flow of water from | |||
capillaries can match, but it will become massive if stimulation is continued for several minutes. For example, | |||
two minutes of stimulation can cause a muscle's overall weight to increase by 6%, but its extracellular | |||
compartment loses 4%, so the muscle cells gain much more than 6% of their weight in that short time (Ward, et | |||
al., 1996). The water that is taken up by cells is taken from the blood, which becomes relatively dehydrated and | |||
thicker in the process.The belief in "semipermeable membranes" (which hasn't been a viable explanation of cell | |||
physiology for a very long time) forces people to explain cell swelling osmotically, which means that they | |||
simply assume that the number of solute particles inside the cell has drastically increased in a very short | |||
time. In Tasaki's experiments (1980, 1981, 1982), the swelling in a nerve coincides with the electrical action | |||
potential, which, according to the osmotic explanation, means that a very large increase in internal osmolarity | |||
happened in essentially no time. The action potential comes and goes in about 2 milliseconds. The swelling also | |||
coincides with heat production and shortening of the nerve fiber. The shrinkage of the nerve fiber after the end | |||
of the action potential may be just as rapid, and the membrane theory offers no explanation for that, either. | |||
(But the restoration of the unswollen state can be very prolonged, depending on conditions extrinsic to the | |||
particular muscle or cell.) Troshin's survey of the theory of osmotic regulation of cell volume showed that the | |||
idea of the cell as a membrane osmometer was false, but very few biologists read his book.Since the excited or | |||
fatigued muscle or nerve swells and gains weight, it's interesting to see what happens to their sensitivity and | |||
strength when they are exposed to hypotonic solutions that tend to promote swelling, or to hypertonic solutions, | |||
that help to prevent swelling.In a hypotonic solution, cells are excited (Lang, et al., 1995: "Exposure of | |||
aortic strips from guinea-pigs to hypotonic extracellular fluid is followed by marked vasoconstriction..."), but | |||
the early excitation is followed by decreased responsiveness (Ohba, et al., 1984: "Exposure of muscle to | |||
hypotonic solutions [70% of normal solution] produced initially a transient increase in twitch after which | |||
twitch declined below the control level"). Hypertonic solutions tend to produce relaxation in normal muscles, | |||
including the aorta (Tabrizchi, 1999), but when muscle function is impaired (especially in the circulatory | |||
system, as in shock) they improve contractile function (Elgjo, et al., 1998: "The maximum contraction force | |||
measured in isolated right papillary muscles ex vivo was significantly greater in HSD-treated than normal | |||
saline-treated animals"). Athletes can lose 4% of their weight by dehydration without decreasing their muscular | |||
strength.Hypothyroidism tends to cause loss of sodium from the blood, and the hyponatremia sometimes leads to a | |||
generalized hypotonicity of the body fluids. The thyroid hormone itself functions as an antioxidant, but much of | |||
its protective effect against cell damage is probably the result of preventing cell swelling and accelerating | |||
the removal of calcium from the cell. (Swelling, like fatigue, causes intracellular calcium to increase.)The | |||
electrical surface charging of lipids in bulk water probably accounts for the increased lipid peroxidation that | |||
occurs in fatigue, edema, and hypothyroidism, when water loses its normal partial hydrophobicity. Increased | |||
carbon dioxide is known to decrease lipid peroxidation, and its production requires adequate thyroid | |||
function.Thyroid stimulation of oxygen consumption tends to prevent lactic acid production, because it keeps the | |||
cytoplasm in a state of relative oxidation, i.e., it keeps the concentration of NAD+ hundreds of times higher | |||
than that of NADH. NADH is required for the conversion of pyruvate to lactate. It is also the source of reducing | |||
potential in many kinds of toxic redox cycling, that generate lipid peroxides, and it maintains the sulfhydryl | |||
system, involving the balance of reduced glutathione with the sulfhydryl-disulfide system of protein bonds, | |||
which governs the cell's electronic state and affects its balance of hydrophobicity and hydrophilicity.The | |||
harmful lipid oxidation interferes with energy production and regulatory processes, and is responsible for some | |||
of the prolonged effects of fatigue, swelling, and hypothyroidism. These lingering effects of lipid oxidation | |||
are undoubtedly amplified by the presence of larger amounts of unstable polyunsaturated fats, as the energy | |||
demands of the fatigued state mobilize free fatty acids from the tissues. One of the oldest tests for | |||
hypothyroidism was the Achilles tendon reflex test, in which the rate of relaxation of the calf muscle | |||
corresponded to thyroid function--the relaxation is slow in hypothyroid people. Water, sodium and calcium are | |||
more slowly expelled by the hypothyroid muscle. Exactly the same slow relaxation occurs in the hypothyroid heart | |||
muscle, contributing to congestive heart failure, because the semi-contracted heart can't receive as much blood | |||
as the normally relaxed heart. The hypothyroid blood vessels are unable to relax properly, contributing to | |||
hypertension. Hypothyroid nerves don't easily return to their energized relaxed state, leading to insomnia, | |||
paresthesias, movement disorders, and nerves that are swollen and very susceptible to pressure damage. With | |||
aging, hypothyroidism, stress, and fatigue, the amount of estrogen in the body typically rises. Estrogen is | |||
catabolic for muscle, and causes systemic edema, and nerve excitation. It weakens muscle contraction in the | |||
bladder, although it lowers the threshold for stimulation of sensation and contraction (Dambros, et al., 2004). | |||
This is the pattern that causes people to wake up frequently, to pass a small amount of urine. (Progesterone has | |||
the opposite effect in the urinary bladder, raising the threshold of response, but strengthening contraction, as | |||
it does in the gallbladder.) Estrogen lowers stimulation threshold in the gallbladder, as it does in the brain. | |||
Part of its excitatory action might be the result of increased hypotonic tissue water, but its effects on nerve | |||
thresholds are practically instantaneous. In 1971 and '72, I gave some of the reasons for thinking that | |||
estrogen's biological effects result from its direct effects on cell water, causing it to become more like bulk | |||
(high dielectric) water. For example, NMR (spin echo) of estrogen treated uterus and of the uterus from an old | |||
animal were closer to bulk water than that of a young animal. Estrogen, like fatigue or excessive oxygen, slows | |||
nerve conduction.Lactic acid production increases with fatigue, aging, hypothyroidism, estrogen excess, and | |||
other inefficient biological states. Its presence, when oxygen is available, indicates that something is | |||
interfering with efficient oxidative energy metabolism. Ammonia, free fatty acids, and various inflammatory | |||
cytokines are also likely to increase in those stress states.A dangerously high level of ammonia in the blood | |||
(hyperammonemia) can be produced by exhaustive exercise, but also by hyperbaric oxygen (or a high concentration | |||
of oxygen), by high estrogen, and by hypothyroidism. It tends to be associated with an excess of lactic acid, | |||
probably because ammonia stimulates glycolysis. Excess oxygen, like hypothyroidism, is equivalent to | |||
"hyperventilation," in producing an abnormally low level of carbon dioxide in the blood. The Krebs cycle, during | |||
stress, is limited by the unavailability of carbon dioxide. These factors result in the waste of glucose, | |||
turning it into lactic acid, rather than carbon dioxide and energy. In these ways, the metabolism of fatigued | |||
muscle (or any cell under stress) is similar to tumor metabolism.Hyperammonemia disturbs excitatory processes, | |||
and can cause seizures, as well as stupor, and is probably involved in mania and depression. Lithium happens to | |||
complex electronically with ammonia, and I think that accounts for some of its therapeutic effects, but carbon | |||
dioxide is the main physiological factor in the elimination of ammonia, since it combines with it to form urea. | |||
The changes in cell water in the excited/fatigued state represent an increase in the water's "structural | |||
temperature," and that would imply that less carbon dioxide could remain dissolved during excitation.Eating | |||
sugar and using caffeine, which increases the oxidation of sugar (Yeo, et al., 2005), can reduce fatigue, both | |||
subjectively and objectively. Metabolically, they increase the production of carbon dioxide. Increasing sugar | |||
decreases the liberation and use of fatty acids, and by a variety of mechanisms, helps to lower the production | |||
of ammonia, lactate, and inflammatory cytokines. (Lactic acid, in combination with acidosis and free | |||
phospholipids, can interfere with efficient cell functions [Pacini and Kane, 1991; Boachie-Ansah, et al., | |||
1992].) Free fatty acids release tryptophan from albumin, contributing to the formation of serotonin, which | |||
increases the sense of fatigue.Aspirin and niacin help to prevent fatigue symptoms, and to prevent many of the | |||
harmful systemic oxidative after-effects. (Both are antilipolytic; aspirin uncouples mitochondria.)Uncoupling of | |||
mitochondrial oxidative metabolism from ATP production helps to consume the sugar which otherwise would be | |||
diverted into lactic acid, and converts it into carbon dioxide instead. Mild hypoxia, as at high altitude, | |||
suppresses lactic acid production ("the lactate paradox"), and increases the amount of carbon dioxide in | |||
tissues. Aspirin and thyroid (T3) increase uncoupling. A drug that used to be used for weight reduction, | |||
DNP, also uncouples mitochondrial metabolism, and, surprisingly, it has some of the beneficial effects of | |||
thyroid and aspirin. It stimulates the consumption of lactic acid and the formation of carbon dioxide.The | |||
squirrel monkey, which on average weighs about 2 or 3 pounds as an adult, lives much longer than other mammals | |||
of its size, usually about 20 years, as long as 27. It has an extremely high rate of oxygen consumption. This is | |||
probably the result of natural uncoupling of the mitochondria, similar to that seen in long-lived mice. Mice | |||
with 17% higher resting oxygen consumption lived 36% longer than slow respiring mice of a related strain | |||
(Speakman, et al., 2004).Living at a high altitude, people tend to eat more and stay leaner than when they live | |||
near sea level. Apparently, their mitochondria are relatively uncoupled, and they have more mitochondria, which | |||
would partly account for their lower production of lactic acid during muscular exertion. Increased thyroid | |||
activity, too, tends to increase mitochondrial mass, as well as their uncoupling.Most of the things that we | |||
think of as fatigue result from disturbances of the hydration of cells, whose sensitivity, composition, and | |||
structure change according to the extent of the disturbance. The hydration is governed by the cells' | |||
"electrical" properties, which are regulated by internal metabolic processes and by systemic processes. When | |||
cellular fatigue reaches a certain point, only the interactions of all the organs can restore stable cellular | |||
structure and functions. The liver eliminates lactic acid and ammonia, the adrenals and gonads provide | |||
stabilizing steroids, and the brain alters activity and behavior, in ways that can reverse most of the effects | |||
of fatigue.But, when the tissues contain large amounts of polyunsaturated fats, every episode of fatigue and | |||
prolonged excitation leaves a residue of oxidative damage, and the adaptive mechanisms become progressively less | |||
effective. When the most powerful adaptive mechanisms, such as the timely synthesis of progesterone, | |||
pregnenolone, DHEA, T3, and the inhibitory transmitters, GABA and glycine, fail, then some of the primitive | |||
defense mechanisms will become chronically activated, and even sleep may fail to restore normal cellular water | |||
and metabolism. Hyperventilation often becomes a problem, making capillary leakiness worse.Water in the body | |||
occupies three major compartments--blood vessels, extracellular matrix, and the moist cell substance itself--and | |||
its condition in each compartment is a little different, and subject to variation. There are no textbooks in use | |||
in the U.S. that treat intracellular water scientifically, and the result is that physicians are confused when | |||
they see patients with edema or with disturbances in blood volume. It rarely occurs to physicians to consider | |||
disturbances of water distribution in problems such as chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, sleep disturbances, | |||
frequent urination, slow bladder emptying, anxiety, paresthesia, movement disorders, the tunnel syndromes, or | |||
even slowed thinking, but "intracellular fatigue" leading to over-hydration is probably the central problem in | |||
these, and many other degenerative and inflammatory problems. The improvements in cell functions and water | |||
distribution that are inversely related to oxygen pressure, and directly related to carbon dioxide, won't be | |||
discussed in medical textbooks until they have given up the idea of membrane-regulated cells. The | |||
"treatment" for intracellular fatigue consists of normalizing thyroid and steroid metabolism, and eating a diet | |||
including fruit juice, milk, some eggs or liver, and gelatin, assuring adequate calcium, potassium sodium, and | |||
magnesium, and using supplements of niacin-amide, aspirin, and carbon dioxide when necessary. Simply increasing | |||
carbon dioxide decreases lactic acid and ammonia, increases GABA (the sleep improving nerve inhibitor), and | |||
regulates mineral and water disposition.One of the outcomes of the study of the physiology of fatigue is that it | |||
leads to a better understanding of cells in general, and offers some new insights into aging, inflammation, and | |||
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high pressure (OHP), which causes convulsions, either suppressing or exacerbating it." "...OHP developed a | |||
sustained blood and brain hyperammonemia in rats which could be negatively modified by Li+ in the | |||
blood." Br J Pharmacol. 1996 Sep;119(1):43-8. Investigation of the negative inotropic effects of 17 | |||
beta-oestradiol in human isolated myocardial tissues. Sitzler G, Lenz O, Kilter H, La Rosee K, Bohm | |||
M. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1984 Jan 7;304(1118):69-84. The interactions between pressure and | |||
anaesthetics. Smith RA, Dodson BA, Miller KW. Compression of animals causes excitation, which has recently posed | |||
a barrier to deeper diving.Lab Anim Sci. 1977 Oct;27(5 Pt 1):655-9. Oxygen consumption and thyroid function in | |||
the squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus). Smoake JA, Mulvey PF Jr, Gerben M, Jones LG. [hypermetabolic]Aging Cell. | |||
2004 Jun;3(3):87-95. Uncoupled and surviving: individual mice with high metabolism have greater mitochondrial | |||
uncoupling and live longer. Speakman JR, Talbot DA, Selman C, Snart S, McLaren JS, Redman P, Krol E, Jackson DM, | |||
Johnson MS, Brand MD. "We found a positive association between metabolic intensity (kJ daily food assimilation | |||
expressed as g/body mass) and lifespan, but no relationships of lifespan to body mass, fat mass or lean body | |||
mass."J Appl Physiol. 1990 Nov;69(5):1651-6. Enhanced leg exercise endurance with a high-carbohydrate diet and | |||
dihydroxyacetone and pyruvate. Stanko RT, Robertson RJ, Galbreath RW, Reilly JJ Jr, Greenawalt KD, Goss FL.Rev | |||
Can Biol. 1959 Apr;18(1):23-52. Studies on the mechanism of the catabolic action of estrogens. Sternberg J, | |||
Pascoe-Dawson E.Jpn J Physiol. 1993;43 Suppl 1:S67-75. The origin of rapid changes in birefringence, light | |||
scattering and dye absorbance associated with excitation of nerve fibers. Tasaki I, Byrne PM. "Based on the | |||
finding that the time-course of the birefringence change accurately coincides with that of swelling of the | |||
nerve, optical changes are interpreted as being brought about by invasion of water into the superficial layer of | |||
the nerve fibers. A close relationship has also been demonstrated between nerve swelling and changes in light | |||
scattering and in dye absorbance."Postgrad Med J. 2000 Jul;76(897):424-6. Primary hypothyroidism masquerading as | |||
hepatic encephalopathy: case report and review of the literature. Thobe N, Pilger P, Jones MP. A 74 year old | |||
woman with hepatitis C of long duration was admitted to hospital in hyperammonaemic coma. Despite aggressive | |||
treatment of hepatic encephalopathy, there was no clinical improvement. As part of her evaluation for other | |||
causes of altered mental status, she was found to be profoundly hypothyroid. Treatment with thyroid replacement | |||
hormone was accompanied by prompt normalisation of her mental status and hyperammonaemia. Hypothyroidism may | |||
exacerbate hyperammonaemia and portosystemic encephalopathy in patients with otherwise well compensated liver | |||
disease. Hyopthyroidism should be considered in the differential diagnosis of encephalopathy in patients with | |||
liver disease.J Trauma. 1992 Jun;32(6):704-12; discussion 712-3. Effects of hypertonic saline dextran | |||
resuscitation on oxygen delivery, oxygen consumption, and lipid peroxidation after burn injury. Tokyay R, | |||
Zeigler ST, Kramer GC, Rogers CS, Heggers JP, Traber DL, Herndon DN.Eur J Pharmacol. 1999 Oct 15;382(3):177-85. | |||
Influence of increase in osmotic pressure with sucrose on relaxation and cyclonucleotides levels in isolated rat | |||
aorta. Tabrizchi R. J. Chem. Phys. 117 (2002) 5101-5104. Predicting water's phase diagram and liquid-state | |||
anomalies, Truskett TM and K. A. Dill KA.J Appl Physiol. 1978 Mar;44(3):333-9. Selected brain amino acids and | |||
ammonium during chronic hypercapnia in conscious rats. Weyne J, Van Leuven F, Kazemi H, Leusen I. "Hypercapnia | |||
increased glutamine and GABA and decreased glutamic and aspartic acids. Changes occurred within 1 h and were | |||
maintained during the observation period of 3 wk." "The changes observed may have a role in metabolic pH | |||
homeostasis of brain tissue and may also be relevant to the modified brain excitability in hypercapnia."J Appl | |||
Physiol. 2005 Apr 14; Caffeine increases exogenous carbohydrate oxidation during exercise. Yeo SE, Jentjens RL, | |||
Wallis GA, Jeukendrup AE. | |||
<p><span> </span></p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2013. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Lactate vs. CO2 in wounds, sickness, and aging; the other approach to cancer</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Lactate vs. CO2 in wounds, sickness, and aging; the other approach to cancer | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong> | |||
GLOSSARY</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Aerobic glycolysis,</strong> the conversion of glucose to lactic acid even in the presence of | |||
oxygen. The presence of oxygen normally restrains glycolysis so that glucose is converted to carbon dioxide | |||
instead of lactic acid. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Anaerobic glycolysis,</strong> the increased conversion of glucose to lactic acid when the supply of | |||
oxygen isn't sufficient, which is a normal event during intense muscle action. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"Warburg Effect"</strong> refers to Otto Warburg's observation that cancer cells produce lactic acid | |||
even in the presence of adequate oxygen. Cancer cells don't "live on glucose," since they are highly adapted | |||
to survive on protein and fats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Pasteur Effect,</strong> the normal response of cells to restrain glycolysis in the presence of | |||
adequate oxygen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Crabtree Effect,</strong> observed originally in yeast, refers to the inhibition of respiration in | |||
the presence of glucose. This occurs in cancers (e.g., Miralpeix, et al., 1990) and in rapidly proliferating | |||
normal cells (e.g., Guppy, et al., 1993). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"Cancer metabolism"</strong> or stress metabolism typically involves an excess of the adaptive | |||
hormones, resulting from an imbalance of the demands made on the organism and the resources available to the | |||
organism. Excessive stimulation depletes glucose and produces lactic acid, and causes cortisol to increase, | |||
causing a shift to the consumption of fat and protein rather than glucose. Increased cortisol activates the | |||
Randle effect (the inhibition of glucose oxidation by free fatty acids), accelerates the breakdown of | |||
protein into amino acids, and activates the enzyme fatty acid synthase, which produces fatty acids from | |||
amino acids and pyruvate, to be oxidized in a "futile cycle," producing heat, and increasing the liberation | |||
of ammonia from the amino acids. Ammonia suppresses respiratory, and stimulates glycolytic, activity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The presence of lactic acid in our tissues is very meaningful, but it is normally treated as only an | |||
indicator, rather than as a cause, of biological problems. Its presence in rosacea, arthritis, heart | |||
disease, diabetes, neurological diseases and cancer has been recognized, and recently it is being recognized | |||
that suppressing it can be curative, after fifty years of denial. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The influence of politics on science is so profound that neither historians nor scientists often care to | |||
consider it honestly and in depth. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
From the 19th century until the second quarter of the 20th century, cancer was investigated mainly as a | |||
metabolic problem. This work, understanding the basic chemistry of metabolism, was culminating in the 1920s | |||
in the work of Otto Warburg and Albert Szent-Gyorgyi on respiration. Warburg demonstrated as early as 1920 | |||
that a respiratory defect, causing aerobic glycolysis, i.e., the production of lactic acid even in the | |||
presence of oxygen, was an essential feature of cancer. (The formation of lactic acid is normal and adaptive | |||
when the supply of oxygen isn't adequate to meet energy demands, for example when running.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many people recognized that this was likely to be the key to the "cancer problem." But in the US, several | |||
factors came together to block this line of investigation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The world wars contributed to the isolation of German scientists, and Warburg, of the famous Jewish banking | |||
family, continued his work in Germany with the support of the government, despite his open opposition to | |||
Nazism. In the years after the war, nothing positive could be said in the US about his work on cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The metabolic interpretation of disease that had been making progress for several decades was suddenly | |||
submerged when government research financing began concentrating on genetic and viral interpretations of | |||
disease. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If an apparently non-infectious disease couldn't be explained on the basis of an inherited | |||
tendency---insanity, epilepsy, diabetes, toxemia of pregnancy, and cancer, for example---then genetic | |||
changes occurring in the individual, as a result of chance or a virus, were invoked. Nutrition and other | |||
conditions of life were until fairly recently said to have no influence on health if the person consumed | |||
sufficient calories and a minimum amount of the essential vitamins, minerals, and protein. The cult of | |||
genetic determinism was so powerful that it wasn't affected by the facts. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 1932, a pediatrician, Alexis Hartmann (with M. Senn) in St. Louis, injected intravenously a solution of | |||
sodium lactate into patients with metabolic acidosis, and several of them survived---despite the fact that | |||
some of them were already suffering from an excess of lactate. The subsequent widespread use of lactate | |||
solutions in hospitals has contributed to the general denial of its toxicity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hartmann and Senn used racemic lactate, that is, a mixture of D-lactate and L-lactate. Our own tissues | |||
produce mostly L-lactate, but they can produce small amounts of D-lactate; larger amounts are produced by | |||
diabetics. Intestinal bacteria can produce large amounts of it, and it has many toxic effects. Methylglyoxal | |||
can be formed from either form of lactate, and it is an important factor in the glycation of proteins. It | |||
can also be formed from MDA, a product of lipid peroxidation. Protein glycation is an important factor in | |||
diabetes and aging, but glucose, rather than lactate and polyunsaturated fats, is commonly said to be the | |||
cause. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
About 50 years ago, lactate was known to induce the formation of new blood vessels, and for a much longer | |||
time it has been known to cause vasodilation and edema. In 1968, it was shown to stimulate collagen | |||
synthesis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Normally, collagen synthesis and neovascularization are caused by lack of oxygen, but lactate can cause them | |||
to occur even in the presence of oxygen. Maintenance of a normal extracellular matrix is essential for | |||
normal functioning and cellular differentiation. Abnormally stimulated collagen synthesis probably | |||
accelerates tumor growth (Rajkumar, et al., 2006). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nervous and hormonal factors can cause lactate to accumulate, even without prior damage to the mitochondria | |||
(e.g., B. Levy, et al., 2003). Psychological, as well as physical, stress and overactivation of glutamate | |||
receptors can cause harmful accumulation of lactate in the brain (Uehara, et al., 2005). Rather than just | |||
being "associated with" tissue damage, lactate directly contributes to the damage, for example in the brain, | |||
causing nerve cell loss by increasing the release of excitotoxic glutamate (Xiang, et al, 2004). When a | |||
panic reaction is produced by sodium lactate, the reduction of protective neurosteroids appears to | |||
contribute to the excitatory state (Eser, et al. 2006); this would make the brain more susceptible to | |||
damage. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lactate increases blood viscosity, mimics stress, causes inflammation, and contributes to shock. Lactated | |||
Ringer's solution contributes to the tissue damage caused by shock, when it's used to resuscitate shock | |||
victims (Deree, et al., 2007, 2008): it contributes to the inflammatory processes associated with shock, | |||
unlike the use of hypertonic saline and other solutions. Lactate contributes to diabetes, inhibiting the | |||
ability to oxidize glucose. It promotes endothelial cell migration and leakiness, with increased vascular | |||
permeability factor (VPF or vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGF) (Nagy, et al. 1985): this can lead to | |||
breakdown of the "blood-brain barrier." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the brain, lactate can cause nerve damage, increasing intracellular fat accumulation, chromatin clumping, | |||
and mitochondrial swelling (Norenberg, et al., 1987). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The lactate in peritoneal dialysis solution impairs differentiation and maturation of (immune, monocyte | |||
derived) dendritic cells; according to the authors of the study, "These findings have important implications | |||
for the initiation of immune responses under high lactate conditions, such as those occurring within tumor | |||
tissues or after macrophage activation<strong>" </strong> | |||
(Puig-Kr"ger, et al., 2003).<strong> </strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lactate also causes macrophages and synovial fibroblasts to release PGE2, which can contribute to | |||
inflammation and bone resorption (Dawes and Rushton, 1994). This is the prostaglandin known to activate the | |||
formation of estrogen (Haffty, et al., 2008). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hartmann's lactated solution has been widely used in hospitals for resuscitation and for patients after | |||
heart surgery and other stressful procedures, but until recently only a few people have objected to its use, | |||
and most of the objection has been to the use of racemic lactate, rather than to lactate itself. In recent | |||
years several studies have compared hypertonic saline (lacking the minerals considered essential since | |||
Sydney Ringer formulated his solution around 1885), and have found it in some cases superior to the | |||
"balanced" lactate solution. Even hypertonic glucose, without minerals, has produced good results in some | |||
studies. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A solution containing a large amount of lactate has been used for peritoneal dialysis when there is kidney | |||
failure, but several studies have compared solutions using bicarbonate instead of lactate, and found that | |||
they don't cause the severe damage that always happened with the traditional solution. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While Warburg was investigating the roles of glycolysis and respiration in cancer,<strong> </strong>a | |||
physician with a background in chemistry, W.F. Koch, in Detroit, was showing that the ability to use oxygen | |||
made the difference between health and sickness, and that the cancer metabolism could be corrected by | |||
restoring the efficient use of oxygen. He argued that a respiratory defect was responsible for | |||
immunodeficiency, allergy, and defective function of muscles, nerves, and secretory cells, as well as | |||
cancer. Koch's idea of cancer's metabolic cause and its curability directly challenged the doctrine of the | |||
genetic irreversibility of cancer that was central to governmental and commercial medical commitments. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Albert Szent-Gyorgyi respected Koch's work, and spent years investigating the involvement of the lactate | |||
metabolites, methylgyoxal and glyoxal, in cell physiology, but since the government's campaign against Koch | |||
was still active when Szent-Gyorgyi came to the U.S., he worked out many of the implications of Koch's work | |||
relating to cellular oxidation without mentioning his name. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lactate formation from glucose is increased when anything interferes with respiratory energy production, but | |||
lactate, through a variety of mechanisms, can itself suppress cellular respiration. (This has been called | |||
the Crabtree effect.) Lactate can also inhibit its own formation, slowing glycolysis. In the healthy cell, | |||
the mitochondrion keeps glycolysis working by consuming pyruvate and electrons (or "hydrogens") from NADH, | |||
keeping the cell highly oxidized, with a ratio of NAD+/NADH of about 200. When the mitochondrion's ability | |||
to consume pyruvate and NADH is limited, the pyruvate itself accepts the hydrogen from NADH, forming lactic | |||
acid and NAD+ in the process. As long as lactate leaves the cell as fast as it forms, glycolysis will | |||
provide ATP to allow the cell to survive. Oxygen and pyruvate are normally "electron sinks," regenerating | |||
the NAD+ needed to produce energy from glucose. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But if too much lactate is present, slowing glycolytic production of ATP, the cell with defective | |||
respiration will die unless an alternative electron sink is available. The synthesis of fatty acids is such | |||
a sink, if electrons (hydrogens) can be transferred from NADH to NADP+, forming NADPH, which is the reducing | |||
substance required for turning carbohydrates and pyruvate and amino acids into fats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This transfer can be activated by the transhydrogenase enzymes in the mitochondria, and also by interactions | |||
of some dehydrogenase enzymes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The enzyme, fatty acid synthase (FAS), normally active in the liver and fat cells and in the | |||
estrogen-stimulated uterus, is highly active in cancers, and its activity is an inverse indicator of | |||
prognosis. Inhibiting it can cause cancer cells to die, so the pharmaceutical industry is looking for drugs | |||
that can safely inhibit it. This enzyme is closely associated with the rate of cell proliferation, and its | |||
activity is increased by both cortisol and estrogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The first biochemical event when a cell responds to estrogen is the synthesis of fat. Estrogen can activate | |||
transhydrogenases, and early studies of estrogen's biological effects provided considerable evidence that | |||
its actions were the result of the steroid molecule's direct participation in hydrogen transfers, oxidations | |||
and reductions. E.V. Jensen's claim that estrogen acts only through a "receptor protein" which activated | |||
gene transcription was based on his experimental evidence indicating that estrogen doesn't participate in | |||
oxidation and reduction processes in the uterus, but subsequently his claim has turned out to be false. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Glycolysis is very inefficient for producing usable energy compared to the respiratory metabolism of the | |||
mitochondria, and when lactate is carried to the liver, its conversion to glucose adds to the energy drain | |||
on the organism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The hypoglycemia and related events resulting from accelerated glycolysis provide a stimulus for increased | |||
activity of the adaptive hormones, including cortisol. Cortisol helps to maintain blood sugar by increasing | |||
the conversion of protein to amino acids, and mobilizing free fatty acids from fat stores. The free fatty | |||
acids inhibit the use of glucose, so the stress metabolism relies largely on the consumption of amino acids. | |||
This increases the formation of ammonia, yet the combination of glycolysis and fat oxidation provides less | |||
carbon dioxide, which is needed for the conversion of ammonia to urea. Ammonia stimulates the formation of | |||
lactate, while carbon dioxide inhibits it. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Starving an animal with a tumor increases the stress hormones, providing free fatty acids and amino acids, | |||
and accelerates the tumor's growth (Sauer and Dauchy, 1987); it's impossible to "starve a tumor," by the | |||
methods often used. Preventing the excessive breakdown of protein and reducing the release of fatty acids | |||
from fat cells would probably cause many cancer cells to die, despite the availability of glucose, because | |||
of lactate's toxic effects, combined with the energy deficit caused by the respiratory defect that causes | |||
their aerobic glycolysis. Recently, the intrinsically high rate of cell death in tumors has been recognized. | |||
The tumor is maintained and enlarged by the recruitment of "stem cells." These cells normally would repair | |||
or regenerate the tissue, but under the existing metabolic conditions, they fail to differentiate properly. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The extracellular matrix in the tumor is abnormal, as well as the metabolites and signal substances being | |||
produced there, and the new cells fail to receive the instructions needed to restore the normal functions to | |||
the damaged tissue. These abnormal conditions can cause abnormal differentiation, and this cellular state is | |||
likely to involve chemical modification of proteins, including remodeling of the chromosomes through | |||
acetylation of the histones (Alam, et al., 2008; Suuronen, et al., 2006). The protein-protective effects of | |||
carbon dioxide are replaced by the protein-damaging effects of lactate and its metabolites. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The ability of lactic acid to displace carbon dioxide is probably involved in its effects on the blood | |||
clotting system. It contributes to disseminated intravascular coagulation and consumption coagulopathy, and | |||
increases the tendency of red cells to aggregate, forming "blood sludge," and makes red cells more rigid, | |||
increasing the viscosity of blood and impairing circulation in the small vessels. (Schmid-Sch"nbein, 1981; | |||
Kobayashi, et al., 2001; Martin, et al., 2002; Yamazaki, et al., 2006.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The features of the stress metabolism include increases of stress hormones, lactate, ammonia, free fatty | |||
acids, and fat synthesis, and a decrease in carbon dioxide. Factors that lower the stress hormones, increase | |||
carbon dioxide, and help to lower the circulating free fatty acids, lactate, and ammonia, include vitamin B1 | |||
(to increase CO2 and reduce lactate), niacinamide (to reduce free fatty acids), sugar (to reduce cortisol, | |||
adrenaline, and free fatty acids), salt (to lower adrenaline), thyroid hormone (to increase CO2). Vitamins | |||
D, K, B6 and biotin are also closely involved with carbon dioxide metabolism. Biotin deficiency can cause | |||
aerobic glycolysis with increased fat synthesis (Marshall, et al., 1976). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A protein deficiency, possibly by increasing cortisol, is likely to contribute to increased FAS and fat | |||
synthesis (Bannister, et al., 1983), but the dietary protein shouldn't provide an excess of tryptophan, | |||
because of tryptophan's role as serotonin precursor--serotonin increases inflammation and glycolysis | |||
(Koren-Schwartzer, et al., 1994). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Incidental stresses, such as strenuous exercise combined with fasting (e.g., running or working before | |||
eating breakfast) not only directly trigger the production of lactate and ammonia, they also are likely to | |||
increase the absorption of bacterial endotoxin from the intestine. Endotoxin is a ubiquitous and chronic | |||
stressor. It increases lactate and nitric oxide, poisoning mitochondrial respiration, precipitating the | |||
secretion of the adaptive stress hormones, which don't always fully repair the cellular damage. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Aspirin protects cells in many ways, interrupting excitotoxic processes by blocking nitric oxide and | |||
prostaglandins, and consequently it inhibits cell proliferation, and in some cases inhibits glycolysis, but | |||
the fact that it can inhibit FAS (Beynen, et al., 1982) is very important in understanding its role in | |||
cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are several specific signals produced by lactate that can promote growth and other features of cancer, | |||
and it happens that aspirin antagonizes those: HIF, NF-kappaB, the kinase cascades, cyclin D1, and heme | |||
oxygenase. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lactate and inflammation promote each other in a vicious cycle (Kawauchi, et al., 2008). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The toxic mechanism of bacterial endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide) involves inappropriate stimulation (Wang and | |||
White, 1999) of cells, followed by inflammation and mitochondrial inhibition. The stimulation seems to be a | |||
direct "biophysical" action on cells, causing them to take up water (Minutoli, et al., 2008), which is | |||
especially interesting, since estrogen's immediate excitatory effect causes cells to take up water. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hypoosmolarity itself is excitatory and anabolic. It stimulates lipolysis and fat oxidation (Keller, et al. | |||
2003), and osmotic swelling stimulates glycolysis and inhibits mitochondrial respiration (Levko, et al., | |||
2000). Endotoxin causes hyponatremia (Tyler, et al., 1994), and a hypertonic salt solution is protective, | |||
lactate solutions are harmful. Other stresses and inflammations also cause hyponatremia. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the effects of endotoxin that leads to prolonged cellular excitation is its inhibition of the | |||
glucuronidation system (B"nhegyi, et al., 1995), since this inhibition allows excitatory estrogen to | |||
accumulate. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In women and rats, antibiotics were found to cause blood levels of estrogen and cortisol to decrease, while | |||
progesterone increased. This effect apparently resulted from the liver's increased ability to inactivate | |||
estrogen and to maintain blood sugar when the endotoxin stress was decreased. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Now that hog farmers' use of antibiotics to stimulate growth has been discouraged, they have sought | |||
vegetables that have a natural antibiotic effect, reducing the formation and absorption of the intestinal | |||
toxins. The human diet can be similarly adjusted, to minimize the production and absorption of the bacterial | |||
toxins. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 2007, two Canadian researchers announced that they were investigating the drug dichloroacetate, which | |||
blocks glycolysis, stopping the production of lactic acid, as a cancer treatment, with success. The drug | |||
(dichloroacetate) has toxic side effects, but it is useful in several other conditions involving | |||
over-production of lactic acid. Other drugs that inhibit glycolysis have also shown anticancer effects in | |||
animals, but are in themselves very toxic. On the theoretical level, it would be better to inhibit only | |||
aerobic glycolysis, rather than inhibiting enzymes that are essential for all glycolysis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since endotoxemia can produce aerobic glycolysis in an otherwise healthy person (Bundgaard, et al., 2003), a | |||
minimally "Warburgian" approach--i.e,, a merely reasonable approach--would involve minimizing the absorption | |||
of endotoxin. Inhibiting bacterial growth, while optimizing intestinal resistance, would have no harmful | |||
side effects. Preventing excessive sympathetic nervous activity and maintaining the intestine's energy | |||
production can be achieved by optimizing hormones and nutrition. Something as simple as a grated carrot with | |||
salt and vinegar can produce major changes in bowel health, reducing endotoxin absorption, and restoring | |||
constructive hormonal functions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Medical tradition and inertia make it unlikely that the connection between cancer and bowel toxins will be | |||
recognized by the mainstream of medicine and governemt. In another article I will describe some of the | |||
recent history relating to this issue. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It's nice that some cancer researchers are now remembering Warburg, but unfortunately they are usually just | |||
fitting the fact of cancer's aerobic glycolysis into the genetic mutant cell paradigm, thinking of the | |||
respiratory defect as just another opportunity for killing the evil deviant cancer cell, rather than looking | |||
for the causes of the respiratory defect. Warburg, Koch, and Szent-Gyorgyi had a comprehensive view of | |||
biology, in which the aerobic production of lactate, resulting from a respiratory defect, itself was | |||
functonally related to the nature of cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A focus on correcting the respiratory defect would be relevant for all of the diseases and conditions | |||
(including heart disease, diabetes, dementia) involving inflammation and inappropriate excitation, not just | |||
for cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Resuscitation. 2008 Feb;76(2):299-310. <strong>Impact of resuscitation strategies on the acetylation status | |||
of cardiac histones in a swine model of hemorrhage.</strong> | |||
Alam HB, Shults C, Ahuja N, Ayuste EC, Chen H, Koustova E, Sailhamer EA, Li Y, Liu B, de Moya M, Velmahos | |||
GC. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
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erythrocytes induced by serotonin.</strong> Assouline-Cohen M, Ben-Porat H, Beitner R. We show here that | |||
serotonin, both in vivo and in vitro, induced a marked activation of phosphofructokinase, the rate-limiting | |||
enzyme in glycolysis, in the membrane-skeleton fraction from erythrocytes. Concomitantly, the hormone | |||
induced a striking increase in lactate content, reflecting stimulation of glycolysis. The enzyme's activity | |||
in the cytosolic (soluble) fraction remained unchanged. These results suggest a defense mechanism in the | |||
erythrocytes against the damaging effects of serotonin, whose concentration in plasma increases in many | |||
diseases and is implicated as playing an important role in circulation disturbances. | |||
</p> | |||
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Endotoxin inhibits glucuronidation in the liver. An effect mediated by intercellular | |||
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provision and this metabolic change is important for tumour growth. Here, we have found <strong>a link | |||
between the tumour suppressor p53, the transcription factor NF-kappaB and glycolysis." | |||
</strong> | |||
"Taken together, <strong>these data indicate that p53 restricts activation of the IKK-NF-kappaB pathway | |||
through suppression of glycolysis.</strong> | |||
These results suggest that a positive-feedback loop exists, whereby glycolysis drives IKK-NF-kappaB | |||
activation, and that hyperactivation of this loop by loss of p53 is important in oncogene-induced cell | |||
transformation." | |||
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and observe the effects on cell viability, NF-kappaB, and membrane type 1 matrix metalloproteinase (MT1-MMP) | |||
expression and the ectodomain shedding of soluble (s)CD44." "Lactate treatment resulted in dose- and | |||
time-dependent effects on human TM cell viability, translocation of NF-kappaB, and activation of MT1-MMP. | |||
<strong> | |||
Increased shedding of sCD44 occurred with the l mM dose of lactate."</strong> | |||
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Blood-brain barrier impairment by low pH buffer perfusion via the internal carotid artery in | |||
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© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2009. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Leakiness, aging, and cancer</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Leakiness, aging, and cancer | |||
</h1> | |||
A thin layer of fibrin lining blood vessels provides a filtering barrier that helps to strengthen the wall and | |||
prevent other proteins from leaking out of the vessels, and it participates in repair processes when the blood | |||
vessel is broken.<p> | |||
Cellular energy metabolism is the basis for maintaining the barrier functions. Energy depletion causes the | |||
endothelial cells lining blood vessels to become excessively permeable. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When the organism's resistance is low, proteins and fats that normally remain inside the bloodstream can | |||
escape into the extracellular matrix and enter cells, contributing to their stress and disorganization, and | |||
other materials can escape from cells and enter the bloodstream. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the simplest demonstrations of fibrin leakage is to shine a beam of light into the eye; the presence | |||
of fibrin and other inappropriate molecules diffuses the light, causing a "flare" in the aqueous | |||
compartment. Albumin, a small protein from the blood, is often seen in the urine during stress. The effects | |||
of that sort of leakage vary with each organ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Fibrin is an essential structural and functional part of the organism, but when it escapes from the | |||
bloodstream it participates in the degenerative processes of inflammation, fibrosis, and tumor formation. | |||
(Its fragments stimulate secretion of inflammatory mediators: Hamaguchi et al., 1991.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the hormonal environment dominated by estrogen, mild stresses such as exertion, or even restless sleep, | |||
allow toxins (and sometimes bacteria) from the intestine to enter the bloodstream, triggering a complex | |||
chain of events that create a systemic inflammatory state. Although these processes have been observed in | |||
many simple experiments, their implications are almost always neglected or denied or explained away. | |||
Incorporation of certain polyunsaturated fats into the tissues increases the leakiness of blood vessels, and | |||
amplifies the reactions to stresses and inflammatory stimuli. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Antioxidants, thyroid hormone, progesterone, and antiinflammatory agents, including glycine or gelatin, | |||
niacin, and saturated fats, can prevent, and in many cases reverse, these degenerative inflammatory | |||
processes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Even a single celled organism has to keep its parts separate, and highly differentiated multicelled | |||
organisms have many special systems that serve to keep their parts separate, so the different tissues and | |||
organs can maintain their distinct functions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The movement of substances from blood to cell, and from cell to cell, is normally very tightly controlled, | |||
and when the systems that control those movements of water and its solutes are damaged, the tissues' | |||
structures and functions are altered. The prevention of inappropriate leakiness can protect against the | |||
degenerative processes, and against aging itself, which is, among other things, a state of generalized | |||
leakiness. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When cells' energy is depleted, water and various dissolved molecules are allowed to move into the cells, | |||
out of the cells, and through or around cells inappropriately. The weakened cells can even permit whole | |||
bacteria and similar particles to pass into and out of the blood stream more easily. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the earliest investigators of the effects of stress and fatigue on nerves and other cells was A.P. | |||
Nasonov, in the first half of the 20th century. A.S. Troshin (1956) has reviewed his work in detail. He | |||
showed that in cells as different as algae and nerve cells, fatigue caused them to take up dyes, and that | |||
the dyes were extruded, if the cells were able to recover their energy. When nerve cells are excited for a | |||
fraction of a second, they take up sodium and calcium, but quickly eliminate them. Prolonged excitation, | |||
leading to fatigue, can gradually shift the balance, allowing more substances to enter, and to stay longer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When nerves or other cells are quickly killed with heavy metals such as osmium, the metals are visible in a | |||
layer at the surface, which is sometimes taken as evidence of a "cytoplasmic membrane," but if the cells | |||
have suffered oxygen deprivation or have been injured by X-rays, the metal will be visible as a grey color | |||
evenly distributed through the cell. The deposition of the metal occurs when it reacts with electrons. In | |||
the relatively vital cell, the heavy metal stops at the surface, and is mostly reduced there, but the | |||
devitalized cell presents no structural or chemical barrier to the entry of the metal, and the reactive | |||
electrons appear to be evenly distributed through the cell. Oxygen deprivation, X-irradiation, and other | |||
stresses cause the cell to be unable to use electrons to produce energy, and instead the electrons are | |||
available to react destructively with whatever may be available. While Nasonov showed that dyes and even | |||
particles enter energetically depleted cells, newer techniques are able to show that the leaky cells are | |||
structurally disrupted by the excessive reduction of their proteins, by excited electrons and free radicals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1970s, experimenters found that muscles from vitamin E deficient animals released their enzymes when | |||
washed in a saline solution, more easily than did the muscles from vitamin E replete animals. Other | |||
experiments around the same time showed that reducing the ATP of muscles caused a similar loss of their | |||
ability to retain their proteins. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Over the years, many experiments have established, both in vitro and in vivo, that fatigue, stress, aging, | |||
and inflammation cause cells to lose their normal constituents, but also to allow foreign materials to enter | |||
more easily. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When I was working on my thesis, around 1970, investigating the effects of aging on the metabolism of the | |||
uterus, I found that the changes occuring during aging were (in all the ways I tested) the same as those | |||
produced by X-irradiation, excess estrogen, oxygen deprivation, excess polyunsaturated fats, and vitamin E | |||
deficiency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although everyone working in the lab was familiar with the appearance of the uterus from old hamsters (they | |||
are typically large, stiff, and bluish), everyone was surprised when I suggested that the aged uteri seemed | |||
to function as if they were under the influence of a considerable amount of estrogen. Everyone was familiar | |||
with the medical textbook doctrine that "menopause is caused by estrogen deficiency." In humans, | |||
gynecologists know about "Chadwick's sign," the fact that the uterine cervix turns blue or purple during | |||
pregnancy, and everyone knows that blood is blue when it's deprived of oxygen, so it's surprising that | |||
estrogen's effect on tissue oxygenation isn't widely recognized. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When estrogen is given to an animal, it almost instantly causes capillaries to become leaky, allowing water | |||
to move out of the blood stream, and at the same time, estrogen causes cells to take up water. Both of these | |||
processes are the same as the early effects of oxygen deprivation. In the normal reproductive cycle, the | |||
surge of estrogen lasts only a few hours, and normal permeability is quickly restored by increasing | |||
progesterone. During those intermittent short exposures to estrogen, there isn't a massive leakage of serum | |||
proteins into the tissues. During the time of estrogenic influence, all kinds of cells are influenced, with | |||
the excitatory equilibrium of nerve cells, glandular cells, and immune system cells being shifted, lowering | |||
the threshold of excitation, or prolonging the excited state. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Anything that causes inflammation causes a similar loss of water from the blood, as it is taken up by | |||
swelling cells. If inflammation is generalized, it causes circulatory shock, because the volume of the blood | |||
has become insufficient to serve the organism's needs. One of Hans Selye's earliest observations of the | |||
effect of an overdose of estrogen was that it causes shock. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although water loss causes the blood to become more viscous under the influence of estrogen, the plasma | |||
becomes hypotonic, meaning that it contains fewer osmotically active solutes than normal; some of the sodium | |||
that helps to maintain the blood's osmotic balance is lost through the kidneys, and some is taken up by the | |||
red blood cells and other cells. The osmotic imbalance of the blood causes tissue cells to take up more | |||
water, contributing to their increased excitability. In many cases, the vascular leakage of inflammation and | |||
shock can be corrected by using osmotically active substances, such as starch solutions, gelatin, or | |||
concentrated sodium chloride. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The tissue water retention caused by estrogen, hypoxia, and stress is analogous to the swelling of gels and | |||
colloids, that is, it's governed by the state of the electrons and counterions in the system. Excitation, | |||
fatigue, or injury can cause a shift of pH toward alkalinity, causing water uptake and swelling. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The blue color of the pregnant cervix, or of the uterus in an animal given an overdose of estrogen, | |||
indicates that the tissue isn't sufficiently oxygenated to maintain its normal red color, even though the | |||
flow of blood is increased. Some experimenters have noticed that newborn animals sometimes have the postural | |||
reflex (lordosis) that indicates an estrogenic state, and that suffocation can produce the same reflex. | |||
Irradiating animals with x-rays will also produce the whole range of estrogenic effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the features of the aged uterus that I studied was the age pigment, lipofuscin, a brown waxy material | |||
that accumulates in old or stressed tissues. Prolonged dosage with estrogen accelerates the formation of | |||
this pigment, which is largely derived from oxidized polyunsaturated fatty acids. Increased amounts of those | |||
fats in the diet, or a deficiency of vitamin E, or exposure to ionizing radiation, or oxygen deprivation, | |||
can also accelerate the formation of the age pigment. The presence of the pigment intensifies the effect of | |||
estrogen, since the pigment wastes oxygen by functioning as an oxidase enzyme. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Other tests that I did on aged, or estrogenized, uterine tissue indicated that several oxidative systems | |||
were activated; for example, the tissues showed an extremely high activity of the enzyme peroxidase, and a | |||
very intense reduction of a chemical dye (tetrazolium/formazan) that indicates the presence of reductive and | |||
oxidative activity, of the sorts caused by radiation and oxygen deprivation. These reductive and oxidative | |||
processes include the production of some free radicals that are capable of reacting randomly with | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The interactions between estrogen and the polyunsaturated fats are now coming to be more widely recognized | |||
as important factors in the inflammatory/hyperpermeable conditions that contribute to the development of | |||
heart and blood vessel disease, hypertension, cancer, autoimmune diseases, dementia, and other less common | |||
degenerative conditions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen increases lipid peroxidation, and maintains a chronically high circulating level of free fatty | |||
acids, mainly PUFA, activates the phospholipases that release arachidonic acid from cells leading to | |||
formation of prostaglandins and isoprostanes, and increases the enzymes that form the inflammation-promoting | |||
platelet activating factor (PAF) while suppressing the enzymes that destroy it, and increases a broad range | |||
of other inflammatory mediators, interleukins, and NF-kappa B. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The leakage of enzymes out of cells and into the blood stream is recognized medically as evidence of damage | |||
to the organ that is losing them. Different combinations of enzymes are commonly considered to be evidence | |||
of a heart attack, or skeletal muscle damage, or liver disease, pancreatitis, prostate cancer, etc. But | |||
often the reason for the leakage isn't understood. Hypothyroidism, for example, causes leakage of enzymes, | |||
possibly mainly from the liver, but also from other organs. Excess estrogen, intense exercise, starvation, | |||
anything that increases lipid peroxidation and free radical production, such as drinking alcohol when the | |||
tissues contain polyunsaturated fats, can cause organs such as heart and liver to leak their components. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The loss of enzymes increases the energy needed to stay alive, but it doesn't necessarily change the basic | |||
functions of the cell. (Though when mitochondrial enzymes leak out into the cytoplasm, the cell's energy | |||
metabolism is impaired, at least temporarily.) But the entry of catalytic materials from other tissues | |||
changes the organization of a cell, giving it conflicting instructions. In many situations, as L.V. | |||
Polezhaev and V. Filatov demonstrated, the substances released during stress and degeneration serve to | |||
stimulate healing and regeneration. But when the resources aren't available for full repair or regeneration, | |||
only a scar, or atrophic fibrosis, or a tumor will be formed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In severe stress, intracellular fibrin deposits have been found in the heart and other organs, including the | |||
prostate gland. Deficiency of testosterone causes vascular leakage into the prostate. Fibrin promotes tumor | |||
growth, partly by serving as a matrix, partly by releasing stimulatory peptides. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Kidney disease, diabetes, pregnancy toxemia and retinal degeneration are probably the best known problems | |||
involving vascular leakage, but increasingly, cancer and heart disease are being recognized as consequences | |||
of prolonged permeability defects. Congestive heart failure and pulmonary hypertension commonly cause | |||
leakage of fluid into the lungs, and shock of any sort causes the lung to get "wet," a waterlogged condition | |||
called "shock lung." Simply hyperventilating for a couple of minutes will increase leakage from the blood | |||
into the lungs; hyperventilation decreases carbon dioxide, and increases serotonin and histamine. Hyperoxia | |||
itself contributes to lung injury, and exacerbates emphysema, though it is common to see patients breathing | |||
a high concentration of oxygen. Emphysema (which can be caused by hypothyroidism or hyper-estrogenism, and | |||
often can be cured by thyroid or progesterone) and many other respiratory problems are associated with | |||
capillary leakage. Cells of the lung and intestine are able to synthesize their own fibrin, apparently | |||
because of their special problems in preventing leakage. Prolonged systemic inflammation can lead to lung | |||
fibrosis, and fibrosis increases the likelihood of lung cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The inflammatory state that causes exaggerated cellular permeability is very closely related to | |||
"hyperventilation," the loss of too much carbon dioxide. The release of serotonin during hyperventilation | |||
isn't the only cause of vascular leakage; the carbon dioxide itself is an essential factor in regulating the | |||
state of cellular electrons and in maintaining cellular integrity. Hyperventilation, like the shift from | |||
oxidative to glycolytic energy production that typifies estrogenized or stressed cells or cancer, raises | |||
intracellular pH. In the case of mast cells, increasing alkalinity causes them to release histamine | |||
(Alfonso, et al., 2005), but similar "alkaline-induced exocytosis" seems to occur in all stressed tissues. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The blood platelets that become incontinent and leak serotonin in the absence of carbon dioxide are | |||
undergoing the same structural stresses experience by endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, mast cells and | |||
all other cells when carbon dioxide is depleted. Although it has been about 70 years since Yandell Henderson | |||
made it clear that supplemental oxygen should be combined with carbon dioxide, mechanical ventilation in | |||
hospitals is still causing lung injury resulting from hyperventilation, i.e., the absence of carbon dioxide. | |||
A similar misunderstanding of biology was involved in the use of dialysis to treat kidney disease. Until | |||
recently, commercial dialysis fluids contained acetate and/or racemic lactate instead of bicarbonate, | |||
because of the difficulty of preparing bicarbonate solutions, and the result was that very prolonged | |||
dialysis would damage the brain and other organs. (Veech and Gitomer, 1988, Veech and Fowler, 1987.) | |||
Dialysis has been seen to increase lung permeability Bell, et al., 1988). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Amyloidosis produced by chronic dialysis affects all organs, but its effects are best known in the brain, | |||
heart, kidneys, and lungs. Serum amyloid-A is one of the acute phase proteins, like C-reactive protein | |||
(CRP), that are produced by inflammation. Estrogen, radiation and other stresses increase those | |||
pro-inflammatory acute phase proteins, and decrease protective albumin, which is called a "negative acute | |||
phase protein," since it decreases when the other acute phase proteins increase. The liver is the major | |||
source of the acute phase proteins, and it is constantly burdened by toxins absorbed from the bowel; | |||
disinfection of the bowel is known to accelerate recovery from stress. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Seen from the perspective of the stress-leakage syndrome, any serious injury or sickness damages all organs. | |||
The exhaled breath is being used to diagnose inflammatory lung disease, since so many of the mediators of | |||
inflammation are volatile, but systemic diseases such as cancer and arthritis, and relatively minor stress | |||
can be detected by changes in the chemicals found in the breath. Polyunsaturated fats and their breakdown | |||
products--aldehydes, prostaglandins, isoprostanes, hydrocarbons, and free radicals--and carbon monoxide, | |||
nitric oxide, nitrite, and hydrogen peroxide are increased in the breath by most stresses. Both proline and | |||
glycine (which are major amino acids in gelatin) are very protective for the liver, increasing albumin, and | |||
stopping oxidative damage. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Saturated fats are protective against free radical damage and can reverse liver fibrosis. Thyroid hormone | |||
protects against excess estrogen, and can prevent or reverse fibrosis of the heart. Antiestrogens are widely | |||
effective against vascular leakage. Thyroid, progesterone, and testosterone are among the most effective | |||
natural antiestrogens, and they are curative in many conditions that involve vascular leakage. Progesterone | |||
and pregnenolone have been called the antifibromatic steroids, and it has been used to treat many | |||
inflammatory and fibrotic diseases, including cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The antiserotonin drugs are being increasingly used to treat fibrotic diseases, and other problems related | |||
to vascular leakage. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Antiinflammatory and anticoagulant things, especially aspirin and vitamin E, protect against the accelerated | |||
turnover of fibrinogen/fibrin caused by estrogen and the various inflammatory states. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<strong>MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND OTHER HORMONE-RELATED BRAIN SYNDROMES (1993)</strong> | |||
Since I am trying to discuss a complex matter in a single article, I have separately outlined the essential | |||
technical points of the argument in a section at the beginning, then I explain how my ideas on the subject | |||
developed, and finally there is a glossary. If you start with "Short-day brain stress," "Estrogen's | |||
effects," and "Symptoms and therapies," you will have the general picture, and can use the other sections to | |||
fill in the technical details. | |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
<strong>THE ARGUMENT: </strong> 1) The hormones pregnenolone, thyroid, and estrogen are | |||
involved in several ways with the changes that occur in multiple sclerosis, but no one talks about them. 2) | |||
The process of myelination is known to depend on the thyroid hormone. The myelinating cells are the | |||
oligodendroglia (oligodendrocytes) which appear to stop functioning in MS (and sometimes to a milder | |||
degree in Alzheimer's disease, and other conditions). The cells' absorption of thyroid hormone | |||
is influenced by dietary factors. 3) The oligodendrocytes are steroid-producing cells (1), and | |||
steroidogenesis is dependent on thyroid hormone, and on thyroid-dependent respiratory enzymes and on | |||
the heme-enzyme P-450scc, which are all sensitive (2) to poisoning by carbon monoxide and cyanide. The | |||
steroid produced by the oligodendrocytes is pregnenolone, which is known to have a profound | |||
anti-stress action (3), and which appears to be the main brain-protective steroid. 4) Lesions | |||
resembling those of MS can be produced experimentally by carbon monoxide or cyanide poisoning.(4) The | |||
lesions tend to be associated with individual small blood vessels, which are likely to contain | |||
clots. (Since all animals have enzymes to detoxify cyanide, this poison is apparently a | |||
universal problem, and can originate in the bowel. "Detoxified" cyanide is still toxic to the | |||
thyroid.) 5) Pregnenolone and progesterone protect against nerve damage (5) by the excitotoxic amino | |||
acids (glutamic acid, aspartic acid, monosodium glutamate, aspartame, etc.), while estrogen (6) and cortisol | |||
(7) are nerve-destroying, acting through the excitotoxic amino acids. Excitotoxins destroy certain | |||
types of nerve, especially the dopaminergic and cholinergic types, leaving the noradrenergic types (8), | |||
paralleling the changes that occur in aging. The clustering of oligodendrocytes around deteriorating | |||
nerve cells could represent an adaptive attempt to provide pregnenolone to injured nerve cells. 6) The | |||
involvement of hormones and environmental factors probably accounts for the intermittent progress of | |||
multiple sclerosis. To the extent that the environmental factors can be corrected, the disease can | |||
probably be controlled. | |||
<strong> SHORT-DAY BRAIN STRESS</strong> | |||
Shortly after I moved from Mexico to Montana, one of my students, a 32 year old woman, began having the same | |||
sensory symptoms her older sister had experienced at the same age, at the onset of multiple sclerosis. | |||
Vertigo and visual distortions of some sort made her consider withdrawing from the university. I'm not sure | |||
why she tried eating a whole can of tuna for lunch a couple of days after the onset of symptoms, but it | |||
seemed to alleviate the symptoms, and she stayed on a high protein diet and never had a recurrence. | |||
She told me some of the lore of MS: That it mostly affects young adults between the ages of 20 and 40, that | |||
it is common in high latitudes and essentially unknown in the tropics, and that it is sometimes exacerbated | |||
by pregnancy and stress. (Later, I learned that systemic lupus erythematosis and other "auto-immune" | |||
diseases also tend to occur mainly during the reproductive years. I discussed some of the implications | |||
of this in "Bean Syndrome.") Having enjoyed the mild climate of Mexico, I became very conscious of the harm | |||
done to us by northern winters, and began developing the idea of "winter sickness." In 1966-67, | |||
allergies, PMS, weight gain, colitis, and arthritis came to my attention as winter-related problems, and I | |||
assumed that the high-latitude incidence of MS related to what I was seeing and experiencing. Studies | |||
in Leningrad began revealing that mitochondria are injured during darkness, and repaired during | |||
daylight. I observed that hamsters' thymus glands shrank in the winter and regenerated in the summer; | |||
shrinkage of the thymus gland is a classical feature of stress, and usually reflects the dominance of | |||
cortisone, though estrogen and testosterone also cause it to shrink. Winter's darkness is stressful in | |||
a very fundamental way, and like any stress it tends to suppress thyroid function. In the hypothyroid | |||
state, any estrogen which is produced tends to accumulate in the body, because of liver sluggishness. I | |||
began to see that PMS could be controlled by certain things--extra light, supplements of sodium and | |||
magnesium, high quality protein, and correction of deficiencies of thyroid and progesterone. In | |||
working on my dissertation, I saw that tissue hypoxia (lower than optimal concentrations of oxygen in the | |||
blood) may result from estrogen excess, vitamin E deficiency, or aging. There is a close biological | |||
parallel between estrogen-dominance and the other hypoxic states, such as stress/shock, and aging. | |||
<strong>ESTROGEN'S EFFECTS</strong> | |||
As a portrait painter, I had been very conscious of the blue aspect that can often be seen in the skin of | |||
young women. In pale areas, the color may actually be blue, and in areas with a rich supply of blood, such | |||
as the lips, the color is lavender during times of high estrogen influence--around ovulation and puberty, | |||
for example. During these times of estrogen dominance, the blood is not only poorly oxygenated, but it | |||
has other special properties, such as an increased tendency to clot. The Shutes' work in the 1930s | |||
began with the use of vitamin E to antagonize estrogen's clot-promoting tendency, and led them to the | |||
discovery that vitamin E can be very therapeutic in heart disease. More recently, it has been found | |||
that men with heart disease have abnormally high estrogen (9), that women using oral contraceptives have | |||
higher mortality from heart attacks (10), and that estrogen tends to promote spasm of blood vessels | |||
(11). (These reactions are probably related to the physiology of menstruation, in which | |||
progesterone withdrawal causes spasms in the spiral arteries of the uterus, producing endometrial | |||
anoxia and cell death.) In toxemia of late pregnancy, or eclampsia, the exaggerated clotting tendency caused | |||
by excess estrogen (or by inadequately opposed estrogen, i.e., progesterone deficiency), can cause | |||
convulsions and strokes. Vascular spasms could be involved here, too. The stasis caused by the | |||
vasospasm would facilitate clotting. (Vascular spasm has been observed in epilepsy, too. Epilepsy can | |||
be brought on by the premenstrual excess of estrogen, and in that situation there is no evidence that | |||
clotting is involved. Leakage of hemoglobin out of red cells can cause vasospasm, so bleeding, | |||
clotting, strokes, and seizures can interact complexly.) The brains of women who have | |||
died following eclampsia show massive clotting in the blood vessels, and their livers are | |||
characteristically injured, with clots (12). Tom Brewer and others have shown very clearly that | |||
malnutrition, especially protein deficiency, is the cause of toxemia of late pregnancy. (In Nutrition | |||
for Women, I discussed the importance of protein in allowing the liver to eliminate estrogen.) Various | |||
researchers have demonstrated that the plaques of MS usually occur in the area served by a single blood | |||
vessel (13, 14), and some have suggested that clotting is the cause. MS patients have been found to | |||
have an abnormal clotting time, and it has been suggested that an altered diet might be able to correct the | |||
clotting tendency. Studies in animals have shown clearly that a protein deficiency increases the fibrinogen | |||
content of blood. (Field and Dam, 1946.) Other factors that increase blood clotting are elevated | |||
adrenalin and cortisone. Protein deficiency causes an adaptive decrease in thyroid function, which | |||
leads to a compensatory increase in adrenaline and cortisone. The combination of high estrogen with | |||
high adrenaline increases the tendency for both clots and spasms of the blood vessels (11). In experimental | |||
poisoning of animals with carbon monoxide or cyanide, the brain lesions resembling MS include blood | |||
clots. The patchy distribution of these spots in the brain suggests that the clotting is secondary to | |||
metabolic damage in the brain. Presumably, the same would be true in ordinary MS, with clots and | |||
spasms being induced in certain areas by metabolic abnormalities in brain cells. The injured cells | |||
that are responsible for myelination of nerve fibers are steroid-forming cells. A failure to secrete | |||
their protective pregnenolone could cause a local spasm of a blood vessel. The circulatory problem | |||
would exacerbate the respiratory problem. Steroid production is dependent on NADH and NADPH, and so requires | |||
adequate energy supplies and energy metabolism. The phenomenon of blood-sludging, studied by M. | |||
Knisely at the University of Chicago in the l930s and l940s, is apparently a general result of decreased | |||
energy metabolism, and is likely to be a factor in energy-and-circulatory vicious circles. | |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
<strong>SYMPTOMS AND THERAPIES </strong> | |||
Around 1976 I met a woman in her mid-thirties who heard about my work with progesterone in animals. | |||
She had been disabled by a brain disease that resembled MS or Devic's disease, inflammation of the optic | |||
nerves. It would sometimes cause blindness and paralysis that persisted for weeks at a time. | |||
During remissions, sometimes using a wheelchair, she would go to the medical school library to try to | |||
understand her condition. She came across Katherina Dalton's work with progesterone, and convinced a | |||
physician to give her a trial injection. Although she had trouble finding people who were willing to | |||
give her progesterone, her recovery was so complete that she was able to climb stairs and drive her car, and | |||
she came to my endocrinology class and gave a very good (and long) lecture on progesterone | |||
therapy. Although her sensory and motor functions became normal, she remained very fat, and | |||
chronically suffered from sore areas on her arms and legs that seemed to be abnormal blood vessels, possibly | |||
with phlebitis. She appeared to need thyroid hormone as well as larger amounts of progesterone, but | |||
never found a physician who would cooperate, as far as I know. In the late 1970s I was seeing a lot of | |||
people who had puzzling health problems. In a period of two or three years, there were five people who | |||
had been diagnosed by neurologists as having multiple sclerosis. In talking to them, it seemed clear | |||
that they had multiple symptoms of hypothyroidism. They weren't severely disabled. Since they | |||
weren't fat or lethargic, their physicians hadn't thought they could be hypothyroid. When they tried | |||
taking a thyroid supplement, all of their symptoms disappeared, including those that had led to their MS | |||
diagnosis. One of the women went to her doctor to tell him that she felt perfectly healthy since | |||
taking thyroid, and he told her to stop taking it, because people who have MS need a lot of rest, and she | |||
wouldn't get enough rest if she was living in a normally active way. The assumption seemed to be that the | |||
diagnosis was more important than the person. (When I refer to a "thyroid supplement" I mean one that | |||
contains some T3. Many people experience "neurological symptoms" when they take thyroxine by | |||
itself. Experimentally, it has been found to suppress brain respiration, probably by diluting the T3 | |||
that was already present in the brain tissue.) | |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
<strong>METABOLISM OF THE OLIGODENDROCYTES</strong> | |||
The rate-regulating step in steroid synthesis involves the entry of cholesterol into the mitochondria, where | |||
the heme-enzyme P-450scc then removes the side-chain of cholesterol (by introducing oxygen atoms), to | |||
produce pregnenolone. This enzyme can be poisoned by carbon monoxide or cyanide, and light can | |||
eliminate the poison (15); this could be one aspect of the winter-sickness problem. Peripheral nerves | |||
are myelinated by essentially the same sort of cell that is called an oligodendrocyte in the brain, but | |||
outside the brain it is called a Schwann cell. It is easier to study the myelin sheath in peripheral | |||
nerves, and the electrical activity of a nerve is the most easily studied aspect of its physiology. | |||
Certain experiments seemed to indicate a "jumping" (saltatory) kind of conduction along the nerve between | |||
Schwann cells, and it was argued that the insulating function of the myelin sheath made this kind of | |||
conduction possible. This idea has become a standard item in physiology textbooks, and its familiarity | |||
leads many people to assume that the presence of myelin sheaths in the brain serves the same "insulating" | |||
function. For a long time it has been known that heat production during nerve conduction reveals a more | |||
continuous mode of conduction, that doesn't conform to the idea of an electrical current jumping | |||
around an insulator. Even if the myelin functioned primarily to produce "saltatory conduction" in | |||
peripheral nerves, it isn't clear how this process could function in the brain. I think of the issue | |||
of "saltatory conduction at the nodes of Ranvier" as another of the fetish ideas that have served to | |||
obstruct progress in biology in the United States. A more realistic approach to nerve function can be | |||
found in Gilbert Ling's work. Ling has demonstrated in many ways that the ruling dogma of "cell | |||
membrane" function isn't coherently based on fact. He found that hormones such as progesterone | |||
regulate the energetic and structural stability of cells. Many people, unaware of his work, have felt | |||
that it was necessary to argue against the idea that there are anesthetic steroids with generalized | |||
protective functions, because of their commitment to a textbook dogma of "cell membrane" physiology. I think | |||
the myelinating cells do have relevance to nerve conduction, but I don't think they serve primarily as | |||
electrical insulators. If the adrenal cortex were inside the heart, it would be obvious to ask whether | |||
its hormones aren't important for the heart's function. Since the oligodendrocytes are | |||
steroid-synthesizers, it seems obvious to ask whether their production of pregnenolone in response to stress | |||
or fatigue isn't relevant to the conduction processes of the nerves they surround. | |||
| |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
<strong>OLD AGE</strong> | |||
A biologist friend of mine who was about 85 became very senile. His wife started giving him thyroid, | |||
progesterone, DHEA and pregnenolone, and within a few days his mental clarity had returned. He | |||
continued to be mentally active until he was 89, when his wife interfered with his access to the hormones. | |||
In old age the brain steroids fall to about 5% of their level in youth. Pregnenolone and DHEA improve | |||
memory in old rats, and improve mood stability and mental clarity of old people. Pregnenolone's action | |||
in improving the sense of being able to cope with challenges probably reflects a quieting and coordinating | |||
of the "sequencing" apparatus of the forebrain, which is the area most sensitive to energy | |||
deprivation. This is the area that malfunctions in hyperactive and "dyslexic" children. | |||
Weakening of the sequencing and sorting processes probably explains the common old-age inability to extract | |||
important sounds from environmental noise, creating a kind of "confusion deafness." Insomnia, worry | |||
and "restless legs" at bedtime are problems for many old people, and I think they are variations of the | |||
basic energy-depletion problem. The oligodendrocytes were reported (Hiroisi and Lee, 1936) to be the source | |||
of the senile plaques or amyloid deposits of Alzheimer's disease.(16) Hiroisi and Lee showed the cells | |||
in different stages of degeneration, ending with translucent "mucoid" spots that stained the same as | |||
amyloid, the material in the senile plaques. This type of cell also appears to form a halo or crown | |||
around degenerating nerve cells--possibly in a protective reaction to provide the nerve cell with any | |||
pregnenolone the oligodendrocytes are able to make. The oligodendrocytes, the source of the | |||
brain steroids (that people previously believed came from the adrenals and gonads, and were just stored in | |||
the brain), myelinate nerve fibers under the influence of thyroid hormone (17). Thyroid is | |||
responsible for both myelination and hormone formation. In old age, glial cells become more numerous, | |||
and nerve cells become structurally and functionally abnormal, but usually there is no problem | |||
with the formation of myelin. In MS, the problem is just with myelination, and there are no | |||
senile plaques or defects in the nerve cells themselves. These differences | |||
suggest the possibility that Alzheimer's disease involves a specific premature loss of brain | |||
pregnen- olone production, but not of thyroid. Recent work suggests a central role for | |||
pregnenolone and progesterone in the regulation of consciousness (18), and possibly in the brain's | |||
detoxifying system. Elsewhere, I have suggested that vitamin A deficiency might cause the excessive | |||
production of the "amyloid" protein. A vitamin A deficiency severely inhibits steroid synthesis. | |||
(It is used so massively in steroid synthesis that a progesterone supplement can prevent the symptoms of | |||
vitamin A deficiency.) I suspect that vitamin A is necessary for the side-chain cleavage that converts | |||
cholesterol to pregnenolone. Iron-stimulated lipid peroxidation is known to block steroid formation, | |||
and vitamin A is very susceptible to destruction by iron and oxidation. Iron tends to | |||
accumulated in tissues with aging. Gajdusek has demonstrated that brain deterioration is | |||
associated with the retention of whatever metal happens to be abundant in the person's environment, not just | |||
with aluminum. (One type of glial cell is known for its metal-binding function, causing them to be | |||
called "metallophils."). According to Gajdusek, "calcium and other di- and trivalent elements" are | |||
"deposited as hydroxyapatites in brain cells" in brain degeneration of the Alzheimer's type.(19) Even early | |||
forms of Alzheimer's disease begin at an age when the youth-associated steroids have begun to decline. | |||
If MS involves a deficiency of thyroid (or of T3 within the oligodendrocytes, where T3 normally can be | |||
made from thyroxine; many things, including protein deficiency, can block the conversion of T4 to T3), those | |||
cells would necessarily be deficient in their ability to produce pregenolone, but in young people the | |||
brain would still be receiving a little pregnenolone, progesterone, and DHEA from the adrenals and | |||
gonads. This relatively abundant youthful supply of hormones would keep most of the body's organs in | |||
good condition, and could keep the bodies of the major brain cells from deteriorating. But if proper | |||
functioning of the nerve fibers requires that they be fed a relatively high concentration of pregnenolone | |||
from their immediately adjacent neighbors (with the amount increasing during stress and fatigue), then their | |||
function would be impaired when they had to depend on the hormones that arrived from the blood stream. For | |||
many years it has been recognized that the brain atrophy of "Alzheimer's disease" resembles the changes seen | |||
in the brain in many other situations: The traumatic dementia of boxers; toxic dementia; the | |||
slow-virus diseases; exposure of the brain to x-<span class="il">rays</span> (20); ordinary old age; | |||
and in people with Down's syndrome who die around the age of thirty. | |||
In menopause, certain nerve cells have lost their ability to regulate the ovaries, because of | |||
prolonged exposure to estrogen (6). The cells that fail as a result of prolonged estrogen exposure | |||
aren't the same cells that fail from prolonged exposure to the glucocorticoids (7), but they have in common | |||
the factor of excitatory injury. Since people who experience premature menopause are known to be more likely | |||
than average to die prematurely, it is reasonable to view menopause as a model of the aging process. It is | |||
now well established that progesterone fails to be produced at the onset of menopause (the first missed | |||
period, increased loss of calcium, symptoms such as hot flashes, etc.), and that estrogen continues to be | |||
produced at monthly intervals for about four years. The essential question for aging, in the present | |||
context, is why the anesthetic steroids are no longer produced at a rate that allows them to protect | |||
tissues, including brain cells, from the excitotoxins. Using menopause as a model for aging, we can | |||
make the question more answerable by asking why progesterone stops being produced. During stress, we are | |||
designed not to get pregnant, and the simplest aspect of this is that ACTH, besides stimulating the adrenals | |||
to produce stress-related hormones, inhibits the production of progesterone by the ovary. Other | |||
stress-induced factors, such as increased prolactin and decreased thyroid, also inhibit progesterone | |||
production. Stress eventually makes us more susceptible to stress. Menopause and other landmarks | |||
of aging simply represent upward inflections in the rate-of-aging curve. Individual variations in type | |||
of stress, hormonal response and diet, etc., probably govern the nature of the aging process in an | |||
individual. The amphetamine-like action of estrogen, which undoubtedly contributes to the general | |||
level of stress and excitotoxic abuse of nerve cells, is probably the only "useful" facet of | |||
estrogen treatment, but a little cocaine might achieve the same effect with no more harm, possibly | |||
less. The toxicity of catecholamines has been known for over thirty years, and estrogen's stimulating | |||
effects are partly the result of its conversion to catechol-estrogens which increase the activity of brain | |||
catecholamines. Estrogen's powerful ability to nullify learning seems never to be mentioned by the | |||
people who promote its use. The importance of a good balance of brain steroids for mood, attention, | |||
memory, and reasoning is starting to be recognized, but powerful economic forces militate against its | |||
general acceptance. Since the brain is the organ that can allow us to adapt without undergoing stress in the | |||
hormonal sense, it is very important to protect its flexibility and to keep its energy level high, so it can | |||
work in a relaxed way. It is the low energy cellular state that leads to the retention of calcium and | |||
iron, and to the production of age pigment, and other changes that constitute the vicious circle of | |||
aging. And mental activity that challenges obsession and rigidity might be the most important brain | |||
energizer. Pseudo-optimism, humor-as-therapy, has a certain value, but a deeper optimism involves a | |||
willingness to assimilate new information and to change plans accordingly. | |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
<strong>SUPPLEMENTS</strong> | |||
Nutritional supplements that might help to prevent or correct these brain syndromes include: Vitamin E | |||
and coconut oil; vitamin A; magnesium, sodium; thyroid which includes T3; large amounts of | |||
animal protein, especially eggs; sulfur, such as magnesium sulfate or flowers of sulfur, but not | |||
to take continuously, because of sulfur's interference with copper absorption; pregnenolone; progesterone if | |||
needed. Bright light, weak in the blue end of the spectrum and with protection against ultraviolet, | |||
activates respiratory metabolism and quenches free radicals. Raw carrot fiber and/or laxatives if | |||
needed; charcoal occasionally for gas or bowel irritation. Coconut oil serves several | |||
purposes. Its butyric acid is known to increase T3 uptake by glial cells. It has a general | |||
pro-thyroid action, for example by diluting and displacing antithyroid unsaturated oils, its short- and | |||
medium-chain fatty acids sustain blood sugar and have antiallergic actions, and it protects mitochondria | |||
against stressinjury. P.S.: In 1979, a woman whose husband was suffering from advanced | |||
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) asked me if I had any ideas for slowing his decline. I described | |||
my suspicion that ALS involved defective metabolism or regulation of testosterone. In some tissues, | |||
testosterone is selectively concentrated to prevent atrophy, and ALS is a disease of middle-age, when | |||
hormone regulation often becomes a special problem. In the late 1970s, there was discussion of a | |||
higher incidence of ALS in males, and especially in athletes. I told her about progesterone's general | |||
protective effects, its antagonism to testosterone, and its prevention of atrophy in various tissues. | |||
She decided to ask her doctor to try progesterone for her husband. Later, I learned that her husband | |||
had gone into a very rapid decline immediately after the injection, and died within a week; the physician | |||
had given him testosterone, since, he said, "testosterone and progesterone are both male hormones." | |||
Besides making me more aware of the problems patients have in communicating with physicians, this tended to | |||
reinforce my feeling that a hormone imbalance is involved in ALS. Although I haven't written much | |||
about testosterone's toxicity, Marian Diamond's work showed that prenatal testosterone is similar to | |||
prenatal estrogen, in causing decreased thickness of the cortex of the brain; both of those hormones oppose | |||
progesterone's brain-protecting and brain-promoting actions. | |||
<strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong> | |||
1) Z. Y. Hu, et al., P.N.A.S. (USA) 84, 8215-9, 1987. 2) P. F. Hall, Vitamins and Hormones 42, | |||
315-370, 1985. 3) J. J. Lambert, et al., Trends in Pharmac. Sci. 8, 224-7, 1987. 4) W. A. D. A. | |||
Anderson, Pathology (second edition), C. V. Mosby, St. Louis, 1953. 5) S. S. Smith, et al., Brain Res. | |||
422, 52-62, 1987. 6) P. M. Wise, Menopause, 1984; S. S. Smith, et al., Brain Res. 422, 40-51, 1987. | |||
7) R. M. Sapolsky, et al., J. Neuroscience 5, 1222-1227, 1985; R. M. Sapolsky and W. Pulsinelli, | |||
Science 229, 1397-9, 1985. 8) C. B. Nemeroff, (Excitotoxins) 290-305, 1984. 9) G. B. | |||
Phillips, Lancet 2, 14-18, 1976; G. B. Phillips, et al., Am. J. Med. 74, 863-9, 1983; M. H. Luria, et al., | |||
Arch Intern Med 142, 42-44, 1982; E. L. Klaiber, et al., Am J Med 73, 872-881, 1982. 10) J. I. Mann, | |||
et al., Br Med J 2, 241-5, 1975. 11) V. Gisclard and P. M. Vanhoutte, Physiologist 28, 324(48.1). | |||
12) W. A. D. A. Anderson, Pathology, 1953; H. H. Reese, et al., editors, 1936 Yearbook of | |||
Neurology, Psychiatry, and Endocrinology, Yearbook Publishers, Chicago, 1937. 13) | |||
T. J. Putnam, Ann Int Med 9, 854-63, 1936; JAMA 108, 1477, 1937. 14) R. S. Dow and G. Berglund, Arch | |||
Neurol and Psychiatry 47, 1, 1992. 15) R. W. Estabrook, et al., Biochem Z. 338, 741-55, 1963. | |||
16) S. Hiroisi and C. C. Lee, Arch Neurol and Psychiat 35, 827-38, 1936. 17) J. M. Matthieu, et | |||
al., Ann Endoc. 1974. 18) K. Iwaharhi, et al., J Ster Biochem and Mol Biol 44(2), 163-4, 1993. | |||
19) D. C. Gajdusek, Chapter 63, page 1519 in Virology (B. N. Fields, et al., editors), Raven Press, | |||
N.Y., 1985. 20) K. Lowenberg-Scharenberg and R. C. Bassett, J Neuropath and Exper Neurol 9, 93, 1950. | |||
GLOSSARY 1. Amyloid is the old term for the "starchy" appearing (including the way it | |||
stains) proteins seen in various diseases, and in the brain in Alzheimer's disease. 2. Cytochrome | |||
P450scc. The cytochromes are "pigments," in the same sense that they contain the colored "heme" group | |||
that gives hemoglobin its color. P450 means "protein that absorbs light at a wavelength of 450. | |||
The scc means "side-chain cleaving," which refers to the removal of the 6 carbon atoms that distinguish | |||
cholesterol from pregnenolone. Other Cyt P450 enzymes are important for their detoxifying oxidizing action, | |||
and some of these are involved in brain metabolism. 3. Glial means "glue-like," and glial cells are | |||
mostly spidery-shaped cells that used to be thought of as just connective, supportive cells in the brain. | |||
4. Mitochondria (the "thread-like bodies") are the structures in cells which produce most of our | |||
metabolic energy by respiration, in response to the thyroid hormones. 5. Mucoid--refers to a | |||
mucoprotein, a protein which contains some carbohydrate. A glycoprotein; usually not intended as a | |||
precise term. 6. Myelination. Myelin is a multilayered enclosure of the axons (the long | |||
processes) of nerve cells, composed of proteins and complex lipids, including cholesterol. The layered | |||
material is a flat, thin extension of the cytoplasm of the oligodendroglial cells. 7. Oligodendrocytes | |||
are one of the kinds of glial (or neuroglial) cells, and structurally they are unusual in having sheet-like, | |||
rather than just thread-like processes; they have a sensitivity ("receptors") to stress and valium, and | |||
produce pregnenolone when activated. Under the influence of thyroid hormone, they wrap themselves in | |||
thin layers around the conductive parts of nerve cells, leaving a multilayered "myelin" coating. Their | |||
absorption of thyroid hormone is promoted by butyrate, an anti-stress substance found in butter and coconut | |||
oil. 8. Steroidogenesis is the creation of steroids, usually referring to the conversion of | |||
cholesterol to hormones. | |||
</blockquote> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2013. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><strong>MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND OTHER HORMONE-RELATED BRAIN SYNDROMES (1993)</strong></span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Since I am trying to discuss a complex matter in a single article, I have separately outlined the | |||
essential technical points of the argument in a section at the beginning, then I explain how my | |||
ideas on the subject developed, and finally there is a glossary. If you start with | |||
"Short-day brain stress," "Estrogen's effects," and "Symptoms and therapies," you will have the | |||
general picture, and can use the other sections to fill in the technical details.</span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><strong>THE ARGUMENT:</strong></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>1) The hormones pregnenolone, thyroid, and estrogen are involved in several ways with the changes | |||
that occur in multiple sclerosis, but no one talks about them.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>2) The process of myelination is known to depend on the thyroid hormone. The myelinating | |||
cells are the oligodendroglia (oligodendrocytes) which appear to stop functioning in MS | |||
(and sometimes to a milder degree in Alzheimer's disease, and other | |||
conditions). The cells' absorption of thyroid hormone is influenced by dietary | |||
factors.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>3) The oligodendrocytes are steroid-producing cells (1), and steroidogenesis is dependent on | |||
thyroid hormone, and on thyroid-dependent respiratory enzymes and on the heme-enzyme | |||
P-450scc, which are all sensitive (2) to poisoning by carbon monoxide and cyanide. The | |||
steroid produced by the oligodendrocytes is pregnenolone, which is known to have a | |||
profound anti-stress action (3), and which appears to be the main brain-protective | |||
steroid.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>4) Lesions resembling those of MS can be produced experimentally by carbon monoxide or cyanide | |||
poisoning.(4) The lesions tend to be associated with individual small blood vessels, | |||
which are likely to contain clots. (Since all animals have enzymes to | |||
detoxify cyanide, this poison is apparently a universal problem, and can originate in the | |||
bowel. "Detoxified" cyanide is still toxic to the thyroid.) </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>5) Pregnenolone and progesterone protect against nerve damage (5) by the excitotoxic amino acids | |||
(glutamic acid, aspartic acid, monosodium glutamate, aspartame, etc.), while estrogen (6) and | |||
cortisol (7) are nerve-destroying, acting through the excitotoxic amino acids. | |||
Excitotoxins destroy certain types of nerve, especially the dopaminergic and cholinergic types, | |||
leaving the noradrenergic types (8), paralleling the changes that occur in aging. The | |||
clustering of oligodendrocytes around deteriorating nerve cells could represent an adaptive | |||
attempt to provide pregnenolone to injured nerve cells.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>6) The involvement of hormones and environmental factors probably accounts for the intermittent | |||
progress of multiple sclerosis. To the extent that the environmental factors can be | |||
corrected, the disease can probably be controlled.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><strong>SHORT-DAY BRAIN STRESS</strong></span></span></span></span | |||
> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Shortly after I moved from Mexico to Montana, one of my students, a 32 year old woman, began having | |||
the same sensory symptoms her older sister had experienced at the same age, at the onset of | |||
multiple sclerosis. Vertigo and visual distortions of some sort made her consider | |||
withdrawing from the university. I'm not sure why she tried eating a whole can of tuna for lunch | |||
a couple of days after the onset of symptoms, but it seemed to alleviate the symptoms, and she | |||
stayed on a high protein diet and never had a recurrence. She told me some of the lore of | |||
MS: That it mostly affects young adults between the ages of 20 and 40, that it is common in high | |||
latitudes and essentially unknown in the tropics, and that it is sometimes exacerbated by | |||
pregnancy and stress. (Later, I learned that systemic lupus erythematosis and other | |||
"auto-immune" diseases also tend to occur mainly during the reproductive years. I | |||
discussed some of the implications of this in "Bean Syndrome.")</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Having enjoyed the mild climate of Mexico, I became very conscious of the harm done to us by | |||
northern winters, and began developing the idea of "winter sickness." In 1966-67, | |||
allergies, PMS, weight gain, colitis, and arthritis came to my attention as winter-related | |||
problems, and I assumed that the high-latitude incidence of MS related to what I was seeing and | |||
experiencing. Studies in Leningrad began revealing that mitochondria are injured during | |||
darkness, and repaired during daylight. I observed that hamsters' thymus glands shrank in | |||
the winter and regenerated in the summer; shrinkage of the thymus gland is a classical feature | |||
of stress, and usually reflects the dominance of cortisone, though estrogen and testosterone | |||
also cause it to shrink. Winter's darkness is stressful in a very fundamental way, and | |||
like any stress it tends to suppress thyroid function. In the hypothyroid state, any | |||
estrogen which is produced tends to accumulate in the body, because of liver sluggishness.</span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>I began to see that PMS could be controlled by certain things--extra light, supplements of sodium | |||
and magnesium, high quality protein, and correction of deficiencies of thyroid and | |||
progesterone. In working on my dissertation, I saw that tissue hypoxia (lower than optimal | |||
concentrations of oxygen in the blood) may result from estrogen excess, vitamin E deficiency, or | |||
aging. There is a close biological parallel between estrogen-dominance and the other | |||
hypoxic states, such as stress/shock, and aging.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><strong>ESTROGEN'S EFFECTS</strong></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>As a portrait painter, I had been very conscious of the blue aspect that can often be seen in the | |||
skin of young women. In pale areas, the color may actually be blue, and in areas with a rich | |||
supply of blood, such as the lips, the color is lavender during times of high estrogen | |||
influence--around ovulation and puberty, for example. During these times of estrogen | |||
dominance, the blood is not only poorly oxygenated, but it has other special properties, such as | |||
an increased tendency to clot. The Shutes' work in the 1930s began with the use of vitamin | |||
E to antagonize estrogen's clot-promoting tendency, and led them to the discovery that vitamin E | |||
can be very therapeutic in heart disease. More recently, it has been found that men with | |||
heart disease have abnormally high estrogen (9), that women using oral contraceptives have | |||
higher mortality from heart attacks (10), and that estrogen tends to promote spasm of | |||
blood vessels (11). (These reactions are probably related to the physiology of | |||
menstruation, in which progesterone withdrawal causes spasms in the spiral arteries of the | |||
uterus, producing endometrial anoxia and cell death.)</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>In toxemia of late pregnancy, or eclampsia, the exaggerated clotting tendency caused by excess | |||
estrogen (or by inadequately opposed estrogen, i.e., progesterone deficiency), can cause | |||
convulsions and strokes. Vascular spasms could be involved here, too. The stasis | |||
caused by the vasospasm would facilitate clotting. (Vascular spasm has been observed in | |||
epilepsy, too. Epilepsy can be brought on by the premenstrual excess of estrogen, and in | |||
that situation there is no evidence that clotting is involved. Leakage of hemoglobin out | |||
of red cells can cause vasospasm, so bleeding, clotting, strokes, and seizures can interact | |||
complexly.) The brains of women who have died following eclampsia show massive | |||
clotting in the blood vessels, and their livers are characteristically injured, with clots | |||
(12).</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Tom Brewer and others have shown very clearly that malnutrition, especially protein deficiency, is | |||
the cause of toxemia of late pregnancy. (In Nutrition for Women, I discussed the | |||
importance of protein in allowing the liver to eliminate estrogen.)</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Various researchers have demonstrated that the plaques of MS usually occur in the area served by a | |||
single blood vessel (13, 14), and some have suggested that clotting is the cause. MS | |||
patients have been found to have an abnormal clotting time, and it has been suggested that an | |||
altered diet might be able to correct the clotting tendency.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Studies in animals have shown clearly that a protein deficiency increases the fibrinogen content of | |||
blood. (Field and Dam, 1946.) Other factors that increase blood clotting are elevated | |||
adrenalin and cortisone. Protein deficiency causes an adaptive decrease in thyroid | |||
function, which leads to a compensatory increase in adrenaline and cortisone. The | |||
combination of high estrogen with high adrenaline increases the tendency for both clots and | |||
spasms of the blood vessels (11).</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>In experimental poisoning of animals with carbon monoxide or cyanide, the brain lesions resembling | |||
MS include blood clots. The patchy distribution of these spots in the brain suggests that | |||
the clotting is secondary to metabolic damage in the brain. Presumably, the same would be | |||
true in ordinary MS, with clots and spasms being induced in certain areas by metabolic | |||
abnormalities in brain cells. The injured cells that are responsible for myelination of | |||
nerve fibers are steroid-forming cells. A failure to secrete their protective pregnenolone | |||
could cause a local spasm of a blood vessel. The circulatory problem would exacerbate the | |||
respiratory problem. Steroid production is dependent on NADH and NADPH, and so requires adequate | |||
energy supplies and energy metabolism. The phenomenon of blood-sludging, studied by M. | |||
Knisely at the University of Chicago in the l930s and l940s, is apparently a general result of | |||
decreased energy metabolism, and is likely to be a factor in energy-and-circulatory vicious | |||
circles.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><strong>SYMPTOMS AND THERAPIES</strong></span></span></span></span | |||
> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Around 1976 I met a woman in her mid-thirties who heard about my work with progesterone in | |||
animals. She had been disabled by a brain disease that resembled MS or Devic's disease, | |||
inflammation of the optic nerves. It would sometimes cause blindness and paralysis that | |||
persisted for weeks at a time. During remissions, sometimes using a wheelchair, she would | |||
go to the medical school library to try to understand her condition. She came across | |||
Katherina Dalton's work with progesterone, and convinced a physician to give her a trial | |||
injection. Although she had trouble finding people who were willing to give her | |||
progesterone, her recovery was so complete that she was able to climb stairs and drive her car, | |||
and she came to my endocrinology class and gave a very good (and long) lecture on | |||
progesterone therapy. Although her sensory and motor functions became normal, she remained | |||
very fat, and chronically suffered from sore areas on her arms and legs that seemed to be | |||
abnormal blood vessels, possibly with phlebitis. She appeared to need thyroid hormone as | |||
well as larger amounts of progesterone, but never found a physician who would cooperate, as far | |||
as I know.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>In the late 1970s I was seeing a lot of people who had puzzling health problems. In a period | |||
of two or three years, there were five people who had been diagnosed by neurologists as having | |||
multiple sclerosis. In talking to them, it seemed clear that they had multiple symptoms of | |||
hypothyroidism. They weren't severely disabled. Since they weren't fat or | |||
lethargic, their physicians hadn't thought they could be hypothyroid. When they tried | |||
taking a thyroid supplement, all of their symptoms disappeared, including those that had led to | |||
their MS diagnosis. One of the women went to her doctor to tell him that she felt | |||
perfectly healthy since taking thyroid, and he told her to stop taking it, because people who | |||
have MS need a lot of rest, and she wouldn't get enough rest if she was living in a normally | |||
active way. The assumption seemed to be that the diagnosis was more important than the person. | |||
(When I refer to a "thyroid supplement" I mean one that contains some T3. Many people | |||
experience "neurological symptoms" when they take thyroxine by itself. Experimentally, it | |||
has been found to suppress brain respiration, probably by diluting the T3 that was already | |||
present in the brain tissue.) </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-size: small"><span | |||
style="font-family: georgia, times, serif" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><strong>METABOLISM OF THE OLIGODENDROCYTES</strong></span></span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>The rate-regulating step in steroid synthesis involves the entry of cholesterol into the | |||
mitochondria, where the heme-enzyme P-450scc then removes the side-chain of cholesterol | |||
(by introducing oxygen atoms), to produce pregnenolone. This enzyme can be poisoned by | |||
carbon monoxide or cyanide, and light can eliminate the poison (15); this could be one aspect of | |||
the winter-sickness problem. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Peripheral nerves are myelinated by essentially the same sort of cell that is called an | |||
oligodendrocyte in the brain, but outside the brain it is called a Schwann cell. It is | |||
easier to study the myelin sheath in peripheral nerves, and the electrical activity of a nerve | |||
is the most easily studied aspect of its physiology. Certain experiments seemed to | |||
indicate a "jumping" (saltatory) kind of conduction along the nerve between Schwann cells, and | |||
it was argued that the insulating function of the myelin sheath made this kind of conduction | |||
possible. This idea has become a standard item in physiology textbooks, and its | |||
familiarity leads many people to assume that the presence of myelin sheaths in the brain serves | |||
the same "insulating" function.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>For a long time it has been known that heat production during nerve conduction reveals a more | |||
continuous mode of conduction, that doesn't conform to the idea of an electrical | |||
current jumping around an insulator. Even if the myelin functioned primarily to produce | |||
"saltatory conduction" in peripheral nerves, it isn't clear how this process could function in | |||
the brain. I think of the issue of "saltatory conduction at the nodes of Ranvier" as | |||
another of the fetish ideas that have served to obstruct progress in biology in the United | |||
States. A more realistic approach to nerve function can be found in Gilbert Ling's | |||
work. Ling has demonstrated in many ways that the ruling dogma of "cell membrane" function | |||
isn't coherently based on fact. He found that hormones such as progesterone regulate the | |||
energetic and structural stability of cells. Many people, unaware of his work, have felt | |||
that it was necessary to argue against the idea that there are anesthetic steroids with | |||
generalized protective functions, because of their commitment to a textbook dogma of "cell | |||
membrane" physiology.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>I think the myelinating cells do have relevance to nerve conduction, but I don't think they serve | |||
primarily as electrical insulators. If the adrenal cortex were inside the heart, it would | |||
be obvious to ask whether its hormones aren't important for the heart's function. Since | |||
the oligodendrocytes are steroid-synthesizers, it seems obvious to ask whether their production | |||
of pregnenolone in response to stress or fatigue isn't relevant to the conduction processes of | |||
the nerves they surround.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><span style="font-size: small"><strong>OLD AGE</strong></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>A biologist friend of mine who was about 85 became very senile. His wife started giving him | |||
thyroid, progesterone, DHEA and pregnenolone, and within a few days his mental clarity had | |||
returned. He continued to be mentally active until he was 89, when his wife interfered | |||
with his access to the hormones.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>In old age the brain steroids fall to about 5% of their level in youth. Pregnenolone and DHEA | |||
improve memory in old rats, and improve mood stability and mental clarity of old people. | |||
Pregnenolone's action in improving the sense of being able to cope with challenges probably | |||
reflects a quieting and coordinating of the "sequencing" apparatus of the forebrain, which is | |||
the area most sensitive to energy deprivation. This is the area that malfunctions in | |||
hyperactive and "dyslexic" children. Weakening of the sequencing and sorting processes | |||
probably explains the common old-age inability to extract important sounds from environmental | |||
noise, creating a kind of "confusion deafness." Insomnia, worry and "restless legs" at | |||
bedtime are problems for many old people, and I think they are variations of the basic | |||
energy-depletion problem.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>The oligodendrocytes were reported (Hiroisi and Lee, 1936) to be the source of the senile plaques | |||
or amyloid deposits of Alzheimer's disease.(16) Hiroisi and Lee showed the cells in | |||
different stages of degeneration, ending with translucent "mucoid" spots that stained the same | |||
as amyloid, the material in the senile plaques. This type of cell also appears to form a | |||
halo or crown around degenerating nerve cells--possibly in a protective reaction to provide the | |||
nerve cell with any pregnenolone the oligodendrocytes are able to make. The | |||
oligodendrocytes, the source of the brain steroids (that people previously believed came from | |||
the adrenals and gonads, and were just stored in the brain), myelinate nerve fibers under | |||
the influence of thyroid hormone (17). Thyroid is responsible for both myelination | |||
and hormone formation. In old age, glial cells become more numerous, and nerve cells | |||
become structurally and functionally abnormal, but usually there is no problem with | |||
the formation of myelin. In MS, the problem is just with myelination, and there are | |||
no senile plaques or defects in the nerve cells themselves. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>These differences suggest the possibility that Alzheimer's disease involves a | |||
specific premature loss of brain pregnen- olone production, but not of | |||
thyroid. Recent work suggests a central role for pregnenolone and progesterone in | |||
the regulation of consciousness (18), and possibly in the brain's detoxifying | |||
system. Elsewhere, I have suggested that vitamin A deficiency might cause the | |||
excessive production of the "amyloid" protein. A vitamin A deficiency severely | |||
inhibits steroid synthesis. (It is used so massively in steroid synthesis that a | |||
progesterone supplement can prevent the symptoms of vitamin A deficiency.) I | |||
suspect that vitamin A is necessary for the side-chain cleavage that converts | |||
cholesterol to pregnenolone. Iron-stimulated lipid peroxidation is known to block | |||
steroid formation, and vitamin A is very susceptible to destruction by iron and | |||
oxidation. Iron tends to accumulated in tissues with aging. Gajdusek | |||
has demonstrated that brain deterioration is associated with the retention of | |||
whatever metal happens to be abundant in the person's environment, not just with | |||
aluminum. (One type of glial cell is known for its metal-binding function, causing | |||
them to be called "metallophils."). According to Gajdusek, "calcium and other di- | |||
and trivalent elements" are "deposited as hydroxyapatites in brain cells" in brain | |||
degeneration of the Alzheimer's type.(19)</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Even early forms of Alzheimer's disease begin at an age when the youth-associated steroids | |||
have begun to decline. If MS involves a deficiency of thyroid (or of T3 within the | |||
oligodendrocytes, where T3 normally can be made from thyroxine; many things, including protein | |||
deficiency, can block the conversion of T4 to T3), those cells would necessarily be deficient in | |||
their ability to produce pregenolone, but in young people the brain would still be | |||
receiving a little pregnenolone, progesterone, and DHEA from the adrenals and gonads. This | |||
relatively abundant youthful supply of hormones would keep most of the body's organs in good | |||
condition, and could keep the bodies of the major brain cells from deteriorating. But if | |||
proper functioning of the nerve fibers requires that they be fed a relatively high concentration | |||
of pregnenolone from their immediately adjacent neighbors (with the amount increasing during | |||
stress and fatigue), then their function would be impaired when they had to depend on the | |||
hormones that arrived from the blood stream.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>For many years it has been recognized that the brain atrophy of "Alzheimer's disease" resembles the | |||
changes seen in the brain in many other situations: The traumatic dementia of boxers; | |||
toxic dementia; the slow-virus diseases; exposure of the brain to x-rays (20); ordinary old age; | |||
and in people with Down's syndrome who die around the age of thirty. | |||
</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>In menopause, certain nerve cells have lost their ability to regulate the ovaries, because of | |||
prolonged exposure to estrogen (6). The cells that fail as a result of prolonged estrogen | |||
exposure aren't the same cells that fail from prolonged exposure to the glucocorticoids (7), but | |||
they have in common the factor of excitatory injury.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Since people who experience premature menopause are known to be more likely than average to die | |||
prematurely, it is reasonable to view menopause as a model of the aging process. It is now well | |||
established that progesterone fails to be produced at the onset of menopause (the first missed | |||
period, increased loss of calcium, symptoms such as hot flashes, etc.), and that estrogen | |||
continues to be produced at monthly intervals for about four years. The essential question | |||
for aging, in the present context, is why the anesthetic steroids are no longer produced at a | |||
rate that allows them to protect tissues, including brain cells, from the excitotoxins. | |||
Using menopause as a model for aging, we can make the question more answerable by asking why | |||
progesterone stops being produced.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>During stress, we are designed not to get pregnant, and the simplest aspect of this is that ACTH, | |||
besides stimulating the adrenals to produce stress-related hormones, inhibits the production of | |||
progesterone by the ovary. Other stress-induced factors, such as increased prolactin and | |||
decreased thyroid, also inhibit progesterone production. Stress eventually makes us more | |||
susceptible to stress. Menopause and other landmarks of aging simply represent upward | |||
inflections in the rate-of-aging curve. Individual variations in type of stress, hormonal | |||
response and diet, etc., probably govern the nature of the aging process in an individual.</span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>The amphetamine-like action of estrogen, which undoubtedly contributes to the general level | |||
of stress and excitotoxic abuse of nerve cells, is probably the only "useful" facet | |||
of estrogen treatment, but a little cocaine might achieve the same effect with no | |||
more harm, possibly less. The toxicity of catecholamines has been known for over thirty | |||
years, and estrogen's stimulating effects are partly the result of its conversion to | |||
catechol-estrogens which increase the activity of brain catecholamines. Estrogen's | |||
powerful ability to nullify learning seems never to be mentioned by the people who promote its | |||
use. The importance of a good balance of brain steroids for mood, attention, memory, and | |||
reasoning is starting to be recognized, but powerful economic forces militate against its | |||
general acceptance.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Since the brain is the organ that can allow us to adapt without undergoing stress in the hormonal | |||
sense, it is very important to protect its flexibility and to keep its energy level high, so it | |||
can work in a relaxed way. It is the low energy cellular state that leads to the retention | |||
of calcium and iron, and to the production of age pigment, and other changes that constitute the | |||
vicious circle of aging. And mental activity that challenges obsession and rigidity might | |||
be the most important brain energizer. Pseudo-optimism, humor-as-therapy, has a certain | |||
value, but a deeper optimism involves a willingness to assimilate new information and to change | |||
plans accordingly.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><span style="font-size: small"><strong>SUPPLEMENTS</strong></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>Nutritional supplements that might help to prevent or correct these brain syndromes include: | |||
Vitamin E and coconut oil; vitamin A; magnesium, sodium; thyroid which includes T3; | |||
large amounts of animal protein, especially eggs; sulfur, such as magnesium sulfate or | |||
flowers of sulfur, but not to take continuously, because of sulfur's interference with | |||
copper absorption; pregnenolone; progesterone if needed. Bright light, weak in the blue | |||
end of the spectrum and with protection against ultraviolet, activates respiratory metabolism | |||
and quenches free radicals. Raw carrot fiber and/or laxatives if needed; charcoal | |||
occasionally for gas or bowel irritation. Coconut oil serves several purposes. | |||
Its butyric acid is known to increase T3 uptake by glial cells. It has a general | |||
pro-thyroid action, for example by diluting and displacing antithyroid unsaturated oils, its | |||
short- and medium-chain fatty acids sustain blood sugar and have antiallergic actions, and it | |||
protects mitochondria against stressinjury. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>P.S.: In 1979, a woman whose husband was suffering from advanced Amyotrophic Lateral | |||
Sclerosis (ALS) asked me if I had any ideas for slowing his decline. I described my | |||
suspicion that ALS involved defective metabolism or regulation of testosterone. In some | |||
tissues, testosterone is selectively concentrated to prevent atrophy, and ALS is a disease of | |||
middle-age, when hormone regulation often becomes a special problem. In the late 1970s, | |||
there was discussion of a higher incidence of ALS in males, and especially in athletes. I | |||
told her about progesterone's general protective effects, its antagonism to testosterone, and | |||
its prevention of atrophy in various tissues. She decided to ask her doctor to try | |||
progesterone for her husband. Later, I learned that her husband had gone into a very rapid | |||
decline immediately after the injection, and died within a week; the physician had given him | |||
testosterone, since, he said, "testosterone and progesterone are both male hormones." | |||
Besides making me more aware of the problems patients have in communicating with physicians, | |||
this tended to reinforce my feeling that a hormone imbalance is involved in ALS. Although | |||
I haven't written much about testosterone's toxicity, Marian Diamond's work showed that prenatal | |||
testosterone is similar to prenatal estrogen, in causing decreased thickness of the cortex of | |||
the brain; both of those hormones oppose progesterone's brain-protecting and brain-promoting | |||
actions.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: small" | |||
><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>1) Z. Y. Hu, et al., P.N.A.S. (USA) 84, 8215-9, 1987.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>2) P. F. Hall, Vitamins and Hormones 42, 315-370, 1985.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>3) J. J. Lambert, et al., Trends in Pharmac. Sci. 8, 224-7, 1987.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>4) W. A. D. A. Anderson, Pathology (second edition), C. V. Mosby, St. Louis, 1953.</span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>5) S. S. Smith, et al., Brain Res. 422, 52-62, 1987.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>6) P. M. Wise, Menopause, 1984; S. S. Smith, et al., Brain Res. 422, 40-51, 1987.</span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>7) R. M. Sapolsky, et al., J. Neuroscience 5, 1222-1227, 1985; R. M. Sapolsky and W. | |||
Pulsinelli, Science 229, 1397-9, 1985.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>8) C. B. Nemeroff, (Excitotoxins) 290-305, 1984.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>9) G. B. Phillips, Lancet 2, 14-18, 1976; G. B. Phillips, et al., Am. J. Med. 74, 863-9, | |||
1983; M. H. Luria, et al., Arch Intern Med 142, 42-44, 1982; E. L. Klaiber, et al., Am J Med 73, | |||
872-881, 1982.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>10) J. I. Mann, et al., Br Med J 2, 241-5, 1975.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>11) V. Gisclard and P. M. Vanhoutte, Physiologist 28, 324(48.1).</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>12) W. A. D. A. Anderson, Pathology, 1953; H. H. Reese, et al., editors, 1936 Yearbook | |||
of Neurology, Psychiatry, and Endocrinology, Yearbook Publishers, Chicago, 1937. | |||
</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>13) T. J. Putnam, Ann Int Med 9, 854-63, 1936; JAMA 108, 1477, 1937.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>14) R. S. Dow and G. Berglund, Arch Neurol and Psychiatry 47, 1, 1992.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>15) R. W. Estabrook, et al., Biochem Z. 338, 741-55, 1963.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>16) S. Hiroisi and C. C. Lee, Arch Neurol and Psychiat 35, 827-38, 1936.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>17) J. M. Matthieu, et al., Ann Endoc. 1974.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>18) K. Iwaharhi, et al., J Ster Biochem and Mol Biol 44(2), 163-4, 1993.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>19) D. C. Gajdusek, Chapter 63, page 1519 in Virology (B. N. Fields, et al., editors), Raven | |||
Press, N.Y., 1985.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>20) K. Lowenberg-Scharenberg and R. C. Bassett, J Neuropath and Exper Neurol 9, 93, | |||
1950.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>GLOSSARY </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>1. Amyloid is the old term for the "starchy" appearing (including the way it stains) proteins | |||
seen in various diseases, and in the brain in Alzheimer's disease.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>2. Cytochrome P450scc. The cytochromes are "pigments," in the same sense that they | |||
contain the colored "heme" group that gives hemoglobin its color. P450 means "protein that | |||
absorbs light at a wavelength of 450. The scc means "side-chain cleaving," which refers to | |||
the removal of the 6 carbon atoms that distinguish cholesterol from pregnenolone. Other Cyt P450 | |||
enzymes are important for their detoxifying oxidizing action, and some of these are involved in | |||
brain metabolism.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>3. Glial means "glue-like," and glial cells are mostly spidery-shaped cells that used to be | |||
thought of as just connective, supportive cells in the brain.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>4. Mitochondria (the "thread-like bodies") are the structures in cells which produce most of | |||
our metabolic energy by respiration, in response to the thyroid hormones.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>5. Mucoid--refers to a mucoprotein, a protein which contains some carbohydrate. A | |||
glycoprotein; usually not intended as a precise term.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>6. Myelination. Myelin is a multilayered enclosure of the axons (the long processes) of | |||
nerve cells, composed of proteins and complex lipids, including cholesterol. The layered | |||
material is a flat, thin extension of the cytoplasm of the oligodendroglial cells.</span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>7. Oligodendrocytes are one of the kinds of glial (or neuroglial) cells, and structurally | |||
they are unusual in having sheet-like, rather than just thread-like processes; they have a | |||
sensitivity ("receptors") to stress and valium, and produce pregnenolone when activated. | |||
Under the influence of thyroid hormone, they wrap themselves in thin layers around the | |||
conductive parts of nerve cells, leaving a multilayered "myelin" coating. Their absorption | |||
of thyroid hormone is promoted by butyrate, an anti-stress substance found in butter and coconut | |||
oil.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span style="font-size: small" | |||
>8. Steroidogenesis is the creation of steroids, usually referring to the conversion of | |||
cholesterol to hormones.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2013. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Natural Estrogens</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Natural Estrogens | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
The fact that an extremely large number of naturally occurring compounds, and an unlimited number of | |||
synthetic compounds, have an estrogen-like activity has been exploited by the drug companies to produce | |||
patented proprietary drugs, especially the contraceptives. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The promotion of "natural estrogens" is a new marketing strategy that capitalizes on the immense promotional | |||
investment of the drug companies in the concept of estrogen replacement as "therapy." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"Whether weak or strong, the estrogenic response of a chemical, if not overcome, will add extra | |||
estrogenic burden to the system. At elevated doses, natural estrogens and environmental estrogen-like | |||
chemicals are known to produce adverse effects. The source of extra or elevated concentration of | |||
estrogen could be either endogenous or exogenous.</strong> The potential of exposure for humans and | |||
animals to environmental estrogen-like chemicals is high." | |||
</p> | |||
<p>D. Roy, et al., 1997</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen marketing has entered a new phase, based on the idea of "specific estrogen-receptor modulators," | |||
the idea that a molecule can be designed which has estrogen's "good qualities without its bad qualities." | |||
This specific molecule will be "good for the bones, the heart, and the brain," without causing cancer of the | |||
breast and uterus, according to the estrogen industry. Meanwhile, soybeans are said to contain estrogens | |||
that meet that goal, and it is often said that "natural estrogens" are better than "synthetic estrogens" | |||
because they are "balanced." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen's effects on cells are immediate and profound, independent of the "estrogen receptors." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Japanese women's relative freedom from breast cancer is independent of soy products<strong>:</strong> | |||
traditional soy foods aren't the same as those so widely used in the US, for example, soy sauce doesn't | |||
contain the so-called soy estrogens, and tea is used much more commonly in Japan than in the US, and | |||
contains health protective ingredients. The "estrogenic" and "antioxidant" polyphenolic compounds of tea are | |||
not the protective agents (they raise the level of estrogen), but tea's <em>caffeine</em> is a very powerful | |||
and general anti-cancer protectant. The influential article in <em> | |||
Lancet</em> (D. Ingram, <em>Lancet</em> 1997;<em>350</em>:990-994. "Phytoestrogens and their role in | |||
breast cancer,"<em> | |||
Breast NEWS: Newsletter of the NHMRC National Breast Cancer Centre, Vol. 3,</em> No. 2, Winter 1997) | |||
used a method known to produce false results, namely, comparing the phytoestrogens (found in large amounts | |||
in soybeans) in the urine of women with or without breast cancer. For over fifty years, it has been known | |||
that the liver excretes estrogens and other toxins from the body, and that when (because of liver inertia) | |||
estrogen isn't excreted by the liver and kidneys, it is retained in the body. This process was observed in | |||
both animals and humans decades ago, and it is <em>also well established that estrogen itself suppresses the | |||
detoxifying systems, causing fewer carcinogens to be excreted</em> in the urine. Ingram's evidence | |||
logically would suggest that the women who have cancer are failing to eliminate estrogens, including | |||
phytoestrogens, at a normal rate, and so are retaining a higher percentage of the chemicals consumed in | |||
their diets. Flavonoids and polyphenols, like our own estrogens, suppress the detoxifying systems of the | |||
body. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Our bodies produce estrogen in a great variety of tissues, not just in the ovaries. Fat cells are a major | |||
source of it. The tendency to gain weight after puberty is one of the reasons that women's estrogen levels | |||
rise with aging throughout the reproductive years, though this isn't the basic reason for estrogen's | |||
lifelong growing influence, even in men. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Our diets provide very significant, if not always dangerous, amounts of estrogen. "Weak estrogens" generally | |||
have the full range of harmful estrogenic effects, and often have additional toxic effects. American women | |||
who eat soy products undergo changes that appear to predispose them to cancer, making their tissues even | |||
more unlike those of the relatively breast-cancer resistant Japanese than they were before eating the soy | |||
foods. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
People under stress, or who have a thyroid deficiency, or who don't eat enough protein, typically have | |||
elevated estrogen levels. The accumulation of the "essential fatty acids," the polyunsaturated oils, in the | |||
tissues promotes the action of estrogen in a variety of ways, and this effect of diet tends to be | |||
cumulative, and to be self-accelerating. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Science is a method that helps us to avoid believing things that are wrong, but there is a distinct herd | |||
instinct among people who "work in science," which makes it easy to believe whatever sounds plausible, if a | |||
lot of other people are saying it is true. This is just as evident in physics as it is in medicine. | |||
Sometimes powerful economic interests help people to change their beliefs, for example as the insurance | |||
industry helped to convince the public of the dangers of smoking. Two of the biggest industries in the | |||
world, the estrogen industry and the soy bean industry, spend vast amounts of money helping people to | |||
believe certain plausible-sounding things that help them sell their products. Sometimes they can achieve | |||
great things just by naming the substance. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogenicity can be defined most simply as "acting the way estrogen does," (originally, the term "estrogen" | |||
meant "producing estrus," the female readiness to mate) and since our natural estrogen does many things, the | |||
definition is often, for practicality, based on the rapid changes produced in certain female organs by | |||
estradiol, specifically, the enlargement of the uterus by first taking up a large amount of water, and | |||
secondarily by the multiplication of cells and the production of specific proteins. A similar process | |||
occurring in the breast is also recognized as an important feature of the estrogen reaction, but as we try | |||
to define just what "estrogenicity" is, we see that there is something deeply wrong with this method of | |||
defining a hormone, because we are constantly learning more about the actions of estrogen, or of a specific | |||
form of the molecule. Calling it "the female hormone" distracted attention from its many functions in the | |||
male, and led to great confusion about its antifertility actions and its other toxicities. Many biologists | |||
called it "folliculin," because of the ovarian follicle's significant role in its production, but the | |||
pharmaceutical industry succeeded in naming it in relation to <strong><em> | |||
one</em></strong> of its functions, and then in extending that idea of it as "the producer of female | |||
receptivity" to the even more misleading idea that it is "the female hormone." But when people speak about | |||
the "estrogenicity" of a substance, they mean that it has properties that parallel those of "folliculin," | |||
the particular group of ovarian hormones that includes estradiol, estrone, and estriol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Over the last 100 years, thousands of publications about estrogen's toxicity have created a slight | |||
resistance to the consumption of the major estrogen products. One ploy to overcoming this resistance is to | |||
call certain products "natural estrogen," as distinguished from "synthetic estrogens." The <strong | |||
>three</strong> | |||
<strong>main estrogens in our bodies are estradiol, estrone, and estriol, though there are many other minor | |||
variants on the basic molecule.</strong> These three estrogens, singly or in combinations, are being | |||
sold as natural estrogens, with their virtues explained in various ways. Implicit in many of these | |||
explanations, is the idea that these are safer than synthetics. They are sometimes contrasted to the "horse | |||
estrogen" in Premarin, as if they are better because they are like the estrogens that people produce. But it | |||
was exactly the normal human estrogens, produced by the ovaries, that led to the basic discoveries about the | |||
toxicity of estrogen, its ability to produce cancer in any organ, to cause seizures, blood clots, birth | |||
defects, accelerated aging, etc. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although I would suppose that a hormone from a horse might be "more natural" for a person's body than a | |||
hormone from a plant, the word "natural" as used in the phrases "natural food store," or "natural medicine," | |||
has come to be associated strongly with things derived from plants. The health food industry, now largely | |||
taken over by giant corporations to sell products that weren't producing as much revenue when sold in | |||
supermarkets and drugstores, has helped to create a culture in which botanical products are thought to be | |||
especially good and safe. Naturally grown free-range chickens used to be favored, because they could eat | |||
anything they wanted, but now eggs laid by factory chickens, eating an industrial corn-and-soy diet, are | |||
from "vegetarian chickens," because the marketers know the public will favor eggs that have the vegetarian | |||
mystique. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biologically active molecules have both general and specific properties. Estrogenicity is a general | |||
property, but all molecules which have that property also have some other specific properties. Estriol is a | |||
little more water soluble than estrone, so it interacts with every body system in a slightly different way, | |||
entering oily environments with slightly less ease, etc. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The estrogen which occurs in yeasts, estradiol, is identical to the major human estrogen, and it is thought | |||
to have a reproductive function in yeasts, though this isn't really understood. A feature of this molecule, | |||
and of all other molecules that "act like estrogen," is the phenolic function, an oxygen and hydrogen group | |||
attached to a resonant benzene ring. Phenol itself is estrogenic, and the phenolic group is so extremely | |||
common in nature that the number of existing estrogenic substances is great, and the number of potential | |||
molecules with estrogen-function is practically infinite. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The phenolic group has many biological functions. For example, it commonly functions as an "antioxidant," | |||
though something which functions as an antioxidant in one situation is often a pro-oxidant in another | |||
situation. The molecule can have catalytic, germicidal, aromatic, neurotropic, and other functions. But it | |||
also always has, to some degree, the "estrogenic" function. This overlap of functions probably accounts for | |||
why so many plants have significant estrogenic activity. (Natural estrogens, like other phenolics, including | |||
the flavonoids, are also mutagenic.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The estrogenic properties of legumes were studied when sheep farmers found that their sheep miscarried when | |||
they ate clover. (I think it's interesting how this terribly toxic effect has been neglected in recent | |||
decades.) All legumes have this property, and all parts of the plant seem to contain some of the active | |||
chemicals. In beans, several substances have been found to contribute to the effect. The estrogenic effects | |||
of the seed oils and the isoflavones have been studied the most, but the well-known antithyroid actions | |||
(again, involving the oils, the isoflavones, and other molecules found in legumes) have an indirect | |||
estrogen-promoting action, since hypothyroidism leads to hyperestrogenism. (Estrogens are known to be | |||
thyroid suppressors, so the problem tends to be self-accelerating.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The various specific actions of the many estrogenic substances in beans and other legumes haven't been | |||
throughly studied, but there is evidence that they are also--like estrogen itself--both mutagenic and | |||
carcinogenic. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The estrogen-promoting actions of soy oil apply to <strong>all of the commonly used polyunsaturated fatty | |||
acids. The same fatty acids that suppress thyroid function, have estrogenic effects.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The isoflavones (many of which are now being promoted as "antioxidants" and "cancer preventives") are toxic | |||
to many organs, but they have clear estrogenic effects, and are active not only immediately in the mature | |||
individual, but when they are present prenatally, they cause feminization of the male genitalia and | |||
behavior, and early maturation of the female offspring, with the tissue changes that are known to be | |||
associated with increased incidence of cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are interesting associations between vegetable "fiber" and estrogens. Because of my own experience in | |||
finding that eating a raw carrot daily prevented my migraines, I began to suspect that the carrot fiber was | |||
having both a bowel-protective and an antiestrogen effect. Several women who suffered from premenstrual | |||
symptoms, including migraine, had their serum estrogen measured before and after the "carrot diet," and they | |||
found that the carrot lowered their estrogen within a few days, as it relieved their symptoms. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Undigestible fiber, if it isn't broken down by bowel bacteria, increases fecal bulk, and tends to speed the | |||
transit of material through the intestine, just as laxatives do. But some of these "fiber" materials, e.g., | |||
lignin, are themselves estrogenic, and other fibers, by promoting bacterial growth, can promote the | |||
conversion of harmless substances into toxins and carcinogens. When there is a clear "antiestrogen" effect | |||
from dietary fiber, it seems to be the result of accelerated transit through the intestine, speeding | |||
elimination and preventing reabsorption of the estrogen which has been excreted in the bile. Laxatives have | |||
this same effect on the excretion of estradiol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some of the isoflavones, lignins, and other phytoestrogens are said to prevent bowel cancer, but some of | |||
them, e.g., lignin, appear to sometimes increase its likelihood. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The phytoestrogens appear to pose a risk to organs besides the breast and uterus, for example the liver, | |||
colon, and pancreas, which isn't surprising, since estrogen is known to be carcinogenic for every tissue. | |||
And carcinogenesis, like precancerous changes, mutations, and reduced repair of DNA, is probably just an | |||
incidental process in the more general toxic effect of acceleration of aging. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong><h3>REFERENCES & ABSTRACTS</h3></strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"Stimulatory influence of soy protein isolate on breast secretion in pre- and postmenopausal | |||
women,"</strong> Petrakis NL; Barnes S; King EB; Lowenstein J; Wiencke J; Lee MM; Miike R; Kirk M; | |||
Coward L Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco 94143-0560, | |||
USA. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev, 1996 Oct, 5:10, 785-94 "Soy foods have been reported to have | |||
protective effects against premenopausal breast cancer in Asian women. No studies have been reported on | |||
potential physiological effects of dietary soy consumption on breast gland function. We evaluated the | |||
influence of the long-term ingestion of a commercial soy protein isolate on breast secretory activity. We | |||
hypothesized that the features of nipple aspirate fluid (NAF) of non-Asian women would be altered so as to | |||
resemble those previously found in Asian women. At monthly intervals for 1 year, 24 normal pre- and | |||
postmenopausal white women, ages 30 to 58, underwent nipple aspiration of breast fluid and gave blood and | |||
24-h urine samples for biochemical studies. No soy was administered in months 1-3 and 10-12. Between months | |||
4-9 the women ingested daily 38 g of soy protein isolate containing 38 mg of genistein. NAF volume, <strong | |||
>gross cystic disease fluid protein (GCDFP-15) concentration</strong>, and NAF cytology were used as | |||
biomarkers of possible effects of soy protein isolate on the breast. In addition, plasma concentrations of | |||
estradiol, progesterone, sex hormone binding globulin, prolactin, cholesterol, high density | |||
lipoprotein-cholesterol, and triglycerides were measured. Compliance was assessed by measurements of | |||
genistein and daidzein and their metabolites in 24-h urine samples. Excellent compliance with the study | |||
protocol was obtained. Compared with NAF volumes obtained in months 1-3, <strong>a 2-6-fold increase in NAF | |||
volume ensued during months 4-9 in all premenopausal women.</strong> A minimal increase or no response | |||
was found in postmenopausal women. No changes were found in plasma prolactin, sex hormone binding globulin, | |||
cholesterol, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglyceride concentrations. Compared with | |||
concentrations found in months 1-3 (no soy), <strong>plasma estradiol concentrations were elevated | |||
erratically throughout | |||
</strong> | |||
a "composite" menstrual cycle during the months of soy consumption. No significant changes were seen in | |||
plasma progesterone concentrations. No significant changes were found in plasma estrogen levels in | |||
postmenopausal women. A moderate decrease occurred in the mean concentration of GCDFP-15 in NAF in | |||
premenopausal women<u> during the months of soy ingestion. </u> | |||
<strong><u>Of potential concern was the cytological detection of epithelial hyperplasia in 7 of 24 women | |||
(29.2%) during the months they were consuming soy protein isolate. The findings did not support our | |||
a priori hypothesis. Instead, this pilot study indicates that prolonged consumption of soy protein | |||
isolate has a stimulatory effect on the premenopausal female breast, characterized by increased | |||
secretion of breast fluid, the appearance of hyperplastic epithelial cells,</u> and elevated levels | |||
of plasma estradiol. | |||
</strong>These findings are suggestive of an estrogenic stimulus from the isoflavones genistein and daidzein | |||
contained in soy protein isolate. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1995 May;80(5):1685-1690 <strong>Dietary intervention study to assess estrogenicity | |||
of dietary soy among postmenopausal women.</strong> Baird DD, Umbach DM, Lansdell L, Hughes CL, Setchell | |||
KD, Weinberg CR, Haney AF, Wilcox AJ, Mclachlan JA. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, | |||
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709, USA. We tested the hypothesis that postmenopausal women on a | |||
soy-supplemented diet show estrogenic responses. Ninety-seven postmenopausal women were randomized to either | |||
a group <strong>that was provided with soy foods for 4 weeks or a control group that was instructed to eat | |||
as usual.</strong> Changes in urinary isoflavone concentrations served as a measure of compliance and | |||
phytoestrogen dose. Changes in serum FSH, LH, sex hormone binding globulin, and vaginal cytology were | |||
measured to assess estrogenic response. <strong>The percentage of vaginal superficial cells (indicative of | |||
estrogenicity) increased for 19% of those eating the diet compared with 8% of controls</strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Oncol Rep 1998 May-Jun;5(3):609-16 <strong> | |||
"Maternal genistein exposure mimics the effects of estrogen on mammary gland development in female mouse | |||
offspring."</strong> Hilakivi-Clarke L, Cho E, Clarke R Lombardi Cancer Center, Research Bldg., Room | |||
W405, Georgetown University, 3970 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC, 20007-2197, USA. <strong>Human and | |||
animal data indicate that a high maternal estrogen exposure during pregnancy increases breast cancer | |||
risk among daughters. This may reflect an increase in the epithelial structures</strong> that are the | |||
sites for malignant transformation, i.e., terminal end buds (TEBs), and a reduction in epithelial | |||
differentiation in the mammary gland. Some <strong>phytoestrogens, such as genistein which is a major | |||
component in soy-based foods, and zearalenone, a mycotoxin found in agricultural products, have | |||
estrogenic effects on the reproductive system, breast and brain. | |||
</strong>The present study examined whether in utero exposure to genistein or zearalenone influences mammary | |||
gland development. Pregnant mice were injected daily with i) 20 ng estradiol (E2); ii) 20 microg genistein; | |||
iii) 2 microg zearalenone; iv) 2 microg tamoxifen (TAM), a partial estrogen receptor agonist; or v) | |||
oil-vehicle between days 15 and 20 of gestation. E2, <strong>genistein, zearalenone, and tamoxifen all | |||
increased the density of TEBs in the mammary glands. Genistein reduced, and zearalenone increased, | |||
epithelial differentiation.</strong> Zearalenone also increased epithelial density, when compared with | |||
the vehicle-controls. None of the treatments had permanent effects on circulating E2 levels. <strong> | |||
Maternal exposure to E2 accelerated body weight gain, physical maturation (eyelid opening), and puberty | |||
onset (vaginal opening) in the female offspring. Genistein and tamoxifen had similar effects on puberty | |||
onset than E2.</strong> Zearalenone caused persistent cornification of the estrus smears. These findings | |||
indicate that <strong>maternal exposure to physiological doses of genistein mimics the effects of E2 on the | |||
mammary gland and reproductive systems in the offspring. Thus, our results suggest that genistein acts | |||
as an estrogen in utero, and may increase the incidence of mammary tumors if given through a pregnant | |||
mother. | |||
</strong> | |||
The estrogenic effects of zearalenone on the mammary gland, in contrast, are probably counteracted by the | |||
permanent changes in estrus cycling. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>[The effects on the thyroid gland of soybeans administered experimentally in healthy | |||
subjects]</strong> | |||
Ishizuki Y; Hirooka Y; Murata Y; Togashi K Nippon Naibunpi Gakkai Zasshi, 1991 May 20, 67:5, 622-9 To | |||
elucidate whether soybeans would suppress the thyroid function in healthy adults, we selected 37 subjects | |||
who had never had goiters or serum antithyroid antibodies. They were given 30g of soybeans everyday and were | |||
divided into 3 groups subject to age and duration of soybean administration. In group 1, 20 subjects were | |||
given soybeans for 1 month. Groups 2 and 3 were composed of 7 younger subjects (mean 29 y.o.) and 10 elder | |||
subjects (mean 61 y.o.) respectively, and the subjects belonging to these groups received soybeans for 3 | |||
months. The Wilcoxon-test and t-test were used in the statistical analyses. In all groups, the various | |||
parameters of serum thyroid hormones remained unchanged by taking soybeans, however TSH levels rose | |||
significantly although they stayed within normal ranges. The TSH response after TRH stimulation in group 3 | |||
revealed a more significant increase than that in group 2, although inorganic iodide levels were lowered | |||
during the administration of the soybeans. We have not obtained any significant correlation between serum | |||
inorganic iodide and TSH. Hypometabolic symptoms (malaise, constipation, sleepiness) and goiters appeared in | |||
half the subjects in groups 2 and 3 after taking soybeans for 3 months, but they disappeared 1 month after | |||
the cessation of soybean ingestion. These findings suggested that excessive soybean ingestion for a certain | |||
duration might suppress thyroid function and cause goiters in healthy people, especially elderly subjects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1996;104 Suppl 4:41-5 <strong>Iodolactones and iodoaldehydes--mediators of | |||
iodine in thyroid autoregulation.</strong> Dugrillon A Central Clinical Laboratory, University of | |||
Heidelberg, Germany. "Within the last decades multiple iodolipid-classes have been identified in thyroid | |||
tissue. For a long time they have been supposed to be involved in thyroid autoregulation, but for the time | |||
being no specific compounds could be isolated. A new approach was stimulated by the finding that <strong | |||
>thyroid cells were able to iodinate polyunsaturated fatty acids</strong> to form iodolactones and by the | |||
identification of alpha-iodohexadecanal (alpha-IHDA) as the major compound of an iodolipid fraction." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Plasma free fatty acids, inhibitor of extrathyroidal conversion of T4 to T3 and thyroid hormone | |||
binding inhibitor in patients with various nonthyroidal illnesses.</strong> | |||
Suzuki Y; Nanno M; Gemma R; Yoshimi T Endocrinol Jpn, 1992 Oct, 39:5, 445-53. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>[Endemic goiter in Austria. Is iodine deficiency the primary cause of goiter?]</strong> | |||
Grubeck-Loebenstein B; Kletter K; Kiss A; Vierhapper H; Waldh"usl W Schweiz Med Wochenschr, 1982 Oct 30, | |||
112:44, 1526-30 <strong> | |||
In spite of government-regulated iodide admixture to table salt, the incidence of goiter is still high | |||
in Austria.</strong> | |||
Iodine excretion and thyroid function were therefore investigated in 80 patients suffering from ordinary | |||
goiter in whom thyroid size and resulting symptoms had increased lately. 25 euthyroid non-goitrous subjects | |||
served as controls. 48% of the goitrous patients investigated presented with iodine excretion of less than | |||
70 micrograms/24 h, suggesting an insufficient iodine supply. Thyroid I131 uptake, basal and TRH-stimulated | |||
plasma TSH concentrations, and serum T3 levels were higher, whereas serum T4 levels were lower in these | |||
patients than in goitrous patients with higher iodine excretion and non-goitrous controls. Iodine deficiency | |||
thus appears to be of pathogenetic relevance in about half of the goitrous Austrian population. <strong | |||
>Other factors enhancing goiter development seem to assume particular importance in goitrous patients with a | |||
sufficient iodine supply.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Biochemical and molecular changes at the cellular level in response to exposure to environmental | |||
estrogen-like chemicals.</strong> Roy D; Palangat M; Chen CW; Thomas RD; Colerangle J; Atkinson A; Yan | |||
ZJ Environmental Toxicology Program, University of Alabama, Birmingham 35294, USA. J Toxicol Environ Health, | |||
1997 Jan, 50:1, 1-29. Estrogen-like chemicals are unique compared to nonestrogenic xenobiotics, because in | |||
addition to their chemical properties, the estrogenic property of these compounds allows them to act like | |||
sex hormones. <strong> | |||
Whether weak or strong, the estrogenic response of a chemical, if not overcome, will add extra | |||
estrogenic burden to the system. At elevated doses, natural estrogens and environmental estrogen-like | |||
chemicals are known to produce adverse effects. The source of extra or elevated concentration of | |||
estrogen could be either endogenous or exogenous.</strong> The potential of exposure for humans and | |||
animals to environmental estrogen-like chemicals is high. Only a limited number of estrogen-like compounds, | |||
such as diethylstilbestrol (DES), bisphenol A, nonylphenol, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and | |||
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), have been used to assess the biochemical and molecular changes at the | |||
cellular level. Among them, DES is the most extensively studied estrogen-like chemical, and therefore this | |||
article is focused mainly on DES-related observations. In addition to estrogenic effects, environmental | |||
estrogen-like chemicals <strong>produce multiple and multitype genetic and/or nongenetic hits.</strong> | |||
Exposure of Syrian hamsters to stilbene estrogen (DES) produces several changes in the nuclei of target | |||
organ for carcinogenesis (kidney): (1) Products of nuclear redox reactions of DES modify transcription | |||
regulating proteins and DNA; (2) transcription is inhibited; (3) tyrosine phosphorylation of nuclear | |||
proteins, including RNA polymerase II, p53, and nuclear insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor, is altered; | |||
and (4<strong>) DNA repair gene DNA polymerase beta transcripts are decreased and mutated.</strong> Exposure | |||
of Noble rats to DES also produces several changes in the mammary gland: proliferative activity is | |||
drastically altered; the cell cycle of mammary epithelial cells is perturbed; telomeric length is | |||
attenuated; etc. It appears that some other estrogenic compounds, such as bisphenol A and nonylphenol, may | |||
also follow a similar pattern of effects to DES, because we have recently shown that these compounds <strong | |||
>alter cell cycle kinetics, produce telomeric associations, and produce chromosomal aberrations. | |||
</strong> | |||
Like DES, bisphenol A after metabolic activation is capable of binding to DNA. However, it should be noted | |||
that a particular or multitype hit(s) will depend upon the nature of the environmental estrogen-like | |||
chemical. The role of individual attack leading to a particular change is not clear at this stage. | |||
Consequences of these multitypes of attack on the nuclei of cells could be (1) nuclear toxicity/cell death; | |||
(2) repair of all the hits and then acting as normal cells; or (3) sustaining most of the hits and acting as | |||
unstable cells. Proliferation of the last type of cell is expected to result in transformed cells. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Potential adverse effects of phytoestrogens.</strong> Whitten PL; Lewis C; Russell E; Naftolin F | |||
Department of Anthropology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322. J Nutr, 1995 Mar, 125:3 Suppl, 771S-776S | |||
Evaluation of the potential benefits and risks offered by naturally occurring plant estrogens requires | |||
investigation of their potency and sites of action when consumed at natural dietary concentrations. Our | |||
investigations have examined the effects of a range of natural dietary concentrations of the most potent | |||
plant isoflavonoid, coumestrol, using a rat model and a variety of estrogen-dependent tissues and endpoints. | |||
Treatments of immature<strong> | |||
females demonstrated agonistic action in the reproductive tract, brain, and pituitary at natural dietary | |||
concentrations. Experiments designed to test for estrogen antagonism demonstrated that coumestrol did | |||
not conform to the picture of a classic antiestrogen. | |||
</strong> | |||
However, coumestrol did suppress estrous cycles in adult females. Developmental actions were examined by | |||
neonatal exposure of pups through milk of rat dams fed a coumestrol, control, or commercial soy-based diet | |||
during the critical period of the first 10 postnatal days or throughout the 21 days of lactation. The 10-day | |||
treatment did not significantly alter adult estrous cyclicity, but the 21-day treatment produced in a | |||
<strong>persistent estrus state in coumestrol-treated females by 132 days of age.</strong> In contrast, the | |||
10-day coumestrol treatments produced <strong>significant deficits in the sexual behavior of male | |||
offspring.</strong> These findings illustrate the broad range of actions of these natural estrogens and | |||
the variability in potency across endpoints. This variability argues for the importance of fully | |||
characterizing each phytoestrogen in terms of its sites of action, balance of agonistic and antagonistic | |||
properties, natural potency, and short-term and long-term effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1987 Aug;157(2):312-317 <strong> | |||
Age-related changes in the female hormonal environment during reproductive life.</strong> Musey VC, | |||
Collins DC, Musey PI, Martino-Saltzman D, Preedy JR. Previous studies have indicated that serum levels of | |||
follicle-stimulating hormone rise with age during the female reproductive life, but the effect on other | |||
hormones is not clear. We studied the effects of age, independent of pregnancy, by comparing serum hormone | |||
levels in two groups of nulliparous,<strong> | |||
premenopausal women aged 18 to 23 and 29 to 40 years. We found that increased age during reproductive | |||
life is accompanied by a significant rise in both basal and stimulated serum follicle-stimulating | |||
hormone levels. This was accompanied by an increase in the serum level of estradiol-17 beta and the | |||
urine levels of estradiol-17 beta and 17 beta-estradiol-17-glucosiduronate.</strong> The serum level of | |||
estrone sulfate decreased with age. Serum and urine levels of other estrogens were unchanged. The basal and | |||
stimulated levels of luteinizing hormone were also unchanged. There was a significant decrease in basal and | |||
stimulated serum prolactin levels. Serum levels of dehydroepiandrosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate | |||
decreased with age, but serum testosterone was unchanged. It is concluded that significant age-related | |||
changes in the female hormonal environment occur during the reproductive years. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rodriguez, P; Fernandez-Galaz, C; Tejero, A. <strong>Controlled neonatal exposure to estrogens: A suitable | |||
tool for reproductive aging studies in the female rat.</strong> | |||
Biology of Reproduction, v.49, n.2, (1993): 387-392. The present study was designed to determine whether the | |||
modification of exposure time to large doses of estrogens provided a reliable model for early changes in | |||
reproductive aging. Silastic implants containing estradiol benzoate (EB) in solution were placed into | |||
5-day-old female Wistar rats and removed 1 day (Ei1 group) or 5 days (Ei5) later. In addition, 100 mu-g EB | |||
dissolved in 100 mu-l corn oil was administered s.c. to another group (EI). Control rats received either | |||
vehicle implants or 100 mu-l corn oil. Premature occurrence of vaginal opening was observed in all three | |||
estrogenized groups independently of EB exposure. However, females bearing implants for 24 h had first | |||
estrus at the same age as their controls and cycled regularly, and neither histological nor gonadal | |||
alterations could be observed at 75 days.. Interestingly, they failed to cycle regularly at 5 mo whereas | |||
controls continued to cycle. On the other hand, the increase of EB exposure (Ei5, EI) resulted in a gradual | |||
and significant delay in the onset of first estrus and in a high number of estrous phases, as frequently | |||
observed during reproductive decline. At 75 days, the ovaries of these last two groups showed a reduced | |||
number of corpora lutea and an increased number of large follicles. According to this histological pattern, | |||
ovarian weight and <strong>progesterone (P) content gradually decreased whereas both groups showed higher | |||
estradiol (E-2) content</strong> than controls. This resulted in <strong>a higher E-2:P ratio, | |||
comparable to that observed in normal aging rats.</strong> The results allow us to conclude that the | |||
exposure time to large doses of estrogens is critical to the gradual enhancement of reproductive decline. | |||
Furthermore, exposures as brief as 24 h led to a potential early model for aging studies that will be useful | |||
to verify whether neuroendocrine changes precede gonadal impairment. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cancer Lett 1992 Oct 30;67(1):55-59 <strong> | |||
Evidence of hypothalamic involvement in the mechanism of transplacental carcinogenesis by | |||
diethylstilbestrol.</strong> Smith DA, Walker BE Anatomy Department, Michigan State University, East | |||
Lansing 48824-1316. Disruption of hypothalamic sex differentiation in the fetus is one hypothesis to explain | |||
female reproductive system anomalies and cancer arising from prenatal exposure to diethylstilbestrol (DES). | |||
To further test this hypothesis, breeding performance and behavior were monitored in a colony of mice | |||
exposed prenatally to DES, using a schedule previously shown to produce anomalies and cancer of the female | |||
reproductive system. <strong> | |||
Fertility decreased with age more rapidly in DES-exposed females than in control females.</strong> | |||
DES-exposed females were less accepting of the male than control females. These observations support the | |||
hypothesis of abnormal hypothalamic sex differentiation as a basic mechanism in DES transplacental | |||
carcinogenesis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Cancer 1980 Aug;26(2):241-6 <strong> | |||
The influence of the lipid composition of the feed given to mice on the immunocompetence and tumour | |||
resistance of the progeny.</strong> | |||
Boeryd B, Hallgren B. In inbred CBA mice, the immunocompetence of adult progeny from breeding pairs fed | |||
three different diets was compared.<strong> | |||
Substitution of soy oil for animal fat in the feed of the mice during gestation or lactation | |||
significantly decreased the PFC response to SRBC in the adult offspring.</strong> Addition of | |||
2-methoxy-substituted glycerol ethers to the feed of mothers deprived of animal fat during lactation partly | |||
restored the PFC response of the male offspring. In the adult mice fed differently pre- and perinatally the | |||
resistance to a transplanted syngeneic sarcoma was similar. The growth of offspring from mice fed the three | |||
diets was similar. In mice deprived of animal fat at weaning and for the following 21 days the immune | |||
reactivity to SRBC, tested about 3 months after stopping the diet, was not influenced. However, the | |||
resistance to a transplanted tumour in similarly fed mice was increased and this resistance was brought | |||
approximately to the control level by methoxy-substituted glycerol ethers. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cancer Res 1987 Mar 1;47(5):1333-8. <strong> | |||
Effects of dietary fats and soybean protein on azaserine-induced pancreatic carcinogenesis and plasma | |||
cholecystokinin in the rat.</strong> Roebuck BD, Kaplita PV, Edwards BR, Praissman M<strong> | |||
Both dietary unsaturated fat and raw soybean products are known to enhance pancreatic carcinogenesis | |||
when fed during the postinitiation phase. A comparison of these two dietary components was made | |||
to</strong> evaluate the relative potency of each ingredient for enhancing pancreatic carcinogenesis and | |||
to determine if this enhancement was correlated with an increase in plasma cholecystokinin (CCK) levels. | |||
Male Wistar rats were initiated with a single dose of azaserine (30 mg/kg body weight) at 14 days of age. | |||
The rats were weaned to test diets formulated from purified ingredients. Dietary protein at 20% by weight | |||
was either casein or soy protein isolate (heat treated or raw).. Corn oil was the unsaturated fat of major | |||
interest and it was fed at either 5 or 20% by weight. Pancreases were quantitatively evaluated for | |||
carcinogen-induced lesions at 2- and 4-month postinitiation. In a second experiment designed to closely | |||
mimic the above experiment, rats were implanted with cannulae which allowed plasma to be repetitively | |||
sampled over a 2.5-week period during which the test diets were fed. Plasma was collected both prior to | |||
introduction of the test diets and afterwards. Plasma CCK was measured by a specific radioimmunoassay. Both | |||
the 20% corn oil diet and the raw soy protein isolate diet enhanced pancreatic carcinogenesis. The effects | |||
of the raw soy protein isolate on the growth of the carcinogen-induced lesions were significantly greater | |||
than the effects of the 20% corn oil diet. Plasma CCK values were not elevated in the rats fed the 20% corn | |||
oil diet, but they were significantly elevated in the rats fed the raw soy protein isolate. Heat-treated soy | |||
protein isolate neither enhanced carcinogenesis nor elevated the plasma CCK level. This<strong> | |||
study demonstrates that certain plant proteins enhance the growth of carcinogen-induced pancreatic foci | |||
and that this effect is considerably greater than the enhancement by high levels of dietary unsaturated | |||
fat. Furthermore, the enhancement by the raw soy protein isolate may be mediated by CCK; but this does | |||
not appear to be the mechanism by which the unsaturated fat, corn oil, enhances pancreatic | |||
carcinogenesis.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem 1988 Mar 15;263(8):3639-3645 <strong> | |||
Dynamic pattern of estradiol binding to uterine receptors of the rat.</strong> | |||
<strong> | |||
Inhibition and stimulation by unsaturated fatty acids.</strong> Vallette G, Christeff N, Bogard C, | |||
Benassayag C, Nunez E | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem 1986 Feb 25;261(6):2954-2959 <strong> | |||
Modifications of the properties of human sex steroid-binding protein by nonesterified fatty | |||
acids.</strong> Martin ME, Vranckx R, Benassayag C, Nunez EA The effect of unsaturated and saturated | |||
nonesterified fatty acids (NEFAs) on the electrophoretic, immunological, and steroid-binding properties of | |||
human sex hormone-binding protein (SBP) were investigated. Tests were carried out on whole serum from | |||
pregnant women and on purified SBP using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, crossed immunoelectrophoresis | |||
with autoradiography, and equilibrium dialysis. All three methods showed that NEFAs influence the binding of | |||
sex steroids to SBP both in whole serum and with the purified protein. Saturated NEFAs caused a 1.5-2-fold | |||
increase in binding of<strong> | |||
dehydrotestosterone, testosterone, and estradiol to SBP, while unsaturated NEFAs, such as oleic (18:1) | |||
and docosahexaenoic (22:6) acids inhibited the binding of these steroids to SBP. Thus, unsaturated | |||
NEFAs</strong> in the concentration range 1-100 microM are more inhibitory for estradiol binding than | |||
for testosterone or dehydrotestosterone binding. In addition to these binding changes, polyacrylamide gel | |||
electrophoresis and immunoelectrophoretic studies revealed a shift in SBP from the slow-moving active native | |||
form to a fast-moving inactive one. There was also a reduction in the apparent SBP concentration by Laurell | |||
immunoelectrophoresis in the presence of unsaturated NEFA (5.5 nmol of NEFA/pmol of protein). These studies | |||
indicate that unsaturated NEFAs induce conformational changes in human SBP which are reflected in its | |||
electrophoretic, immunological, and steroid-binding properties. They suggest that the fatty acid content of | |||
the SBP environment may result in lower steroid hormone binding and thus increased free hormone levels. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem 1986 Feb 25;261(6):2954-2959 <strong> | |||
Modifications of the properties of human sex steroid-binding protein by nonesterified fatty | |||
acids.</strong> Martin ME, Vranckx R, Benassayag C, Nunez EA The effect of unsaturated and saturated | |||
nonesterified fatty acids (NEFAs) on the electrophoretic, immunological, and steroid-binding properties of | |||
human sex hormone-binding protein (SBP) were investigated. Tests were carried out on whole serum from | |||
pregnant women and on purified SBP using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, crossed immunoelectrophoresis | |||
with autoradiography, and equilibrium dialysis. All three methods showed that NEFAs influence the binding of | |||
sex steroids to SBP both in whole serum and with the purified protein. Saturated NEFAs caused a 1.5-2-fold | |||
increase in binding of<strong> | |||
dehydrotestosterone, testosterone, and estradiol to SBP, while unsaturated NEFAs, such as oleic (18:1) | |||
and docosahexaenoic (22:6) acids inhibited the binding of these steroids to SBP. | |||
</strong> | |||
Thus, unsaturated NEFAs in the concentration range 1-100 microM are more inhibitory for estradiol binding | |||
than for testosterone or dehydrotestosterone binding. In addition to these binding changes, polyacrylamide | |||
gel electrophoresis and immunoelectrophoretic studies revealed a shift in SBP from the slow-moving active | |||
native form to a fast-moving inactive one. There was also a reduction in the apparent SBP concentration by | |||
Laurell immunoelectrophoresis in the presence of unsaturated NEFA (5.5 nmol of NEFA/pmol of protein). These | |||
studies indicate that unsaturated NEFAs induce conformational changes in human SBP which are reflected in | |||
its electrophoretic, immunological, and steroid-binding properties. They suggest that the fatty acid content | |||
of the SBP environment may result in lower steroid hormone binding and <strong> | |||
thus increased free hormone levels. | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem 1986 Feb;24(2):657-659 <strong> | |||
Free fatty acids: a possible regulator of the available oestradiol fractions in plasma.</strong> Reed | |||
MJ, Beranek PA, Cheng RW, James VH Consumption of dietary fats has been linked to the high incidence of | |||
breast cancer found in Western women. In vitro studies we have carried out show that <strong> | |||
unsaturated free fatty acids can increase the biologically available oestradiol fractions in | |||
plasma.</strong> It is possible therefore that the increased risk for breast cancer associated with a | |||
diet high in fats may be related to an elevation in the biologically available oestradiol fractions in | |||
plasma. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrinology 1986 Jan;118(1):1-7 <strong> | |||
Potentiation of estradiol binding to human tissue proteins by unsaturated nonesterified fatty | |||
acids.</strong> Benassayag C, Vallette G, Hassid J, Raymond JP, Nunez EA Nonesterified fatty acids | |||
(NEFAs) have been recently shown in the rat to be involved in steroid hormone expression, having effects on | |||
plasma transport and <strong>intracellular activity. </strong> | |||
This study examines the influence of saturated and unsaturated NEFAs on estradiol (E2) binding to cytosol | |||
from human uterus, breast, and melanoma. Binding was analyzed after separation with dextran-coated charcoal | |||
or hydroxylapatite and by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. <strong> | |||
Unsaturated NEFAs induced a 2- to 10-fold increase (P less than 0.001) in E2 binding to cytosol | |||
</strong>from normal, fibromatous, and neoplastic uteri, while saturated NEFAs<strong> | |||
had a slight inhibitory effect</strong> (P less than 0.05). Similar effects were seen with cytosol from | |||
metastatic melanoma lymph nodes and neoplastic breast tissues. By contrast, unsaturated NEFAs did not | |||
increase E2 binding to serum from these patients. Density gradient centrifugation indicated that the | |||
increased binding was associated with the proteins present in the 2- to 4 S region. Analysis of E2 | |||
metabolites in the presence of unsaturated NEFAs showed the formation of water-soluble derivatives. Seventy | |||
percent of these E2 derivatives were trichloracetic acid precipitable, suggesting a covalent link between | |||
the steroid and a protein. The existence of such water-soluble metabolites could be erroneously interpreted | |||
as a true binding to soluble cytoplasmic receptors. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann N Y Acad Sci 1988;538:257-264 <strong> | |||
Possible relevance of steroid availability and breast cancer.</strong> Bruning PF, Bonfrer JM | |||
Netherlands Cancer Institute (Antoni van Leeuwenhoekhuis), Amsterdam. "The as yet circumstantial evidence | |||
for a central role of estrogens in the promotion of human breast cancer is supported by many data. However, | |||
it has not been possible to identify breast cancer patients or women at risk by abnormally elevated estrogen | |||
levels in plasma. <strong>The concept of available, i.e., non-SHBG bound sex steroid seems to offer a better | |||
understanding than total serum steroid levels do. We demonstrated that sex steroid protein binding is | |||
decreased by free fatty acids."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Surg Oncol 1993 Feb;52(2):77-82. <strong> | |||
The effect of the fiber components cellulose and lignin on experimental colon neoplasia.</strong> Sloan | |||
DA, Fleiszer DM, Richards GK, Murray D, Brown RA Department of Surgery, University of Kentucky College of | |||
Medicine, Lexington. Sixty Sprague-Dawley rats were pair-fed one of three nutritionally identical diets. One | |||
diet contained "low-fiber" (3.8% crude fiber); the others contained "high fiber" (28.7% crude fiber) | |||
composed of either cellulose or lignin. Although both "high fiber" diets had similar stool bulking effects, | |||
<strong> only the cellulose diet</strong> | |||
was associated with a reduction in 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH)-induced colon neoplasms. The cellulose diet | |||
was also associated with distinct changes in the gut bacterial profile and with a lowered serum cholesterol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nutr Cancer 1984;6(2):77-85 <strong> | |||
Enhancement of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine-induced large bowel tumorigenesis in Balb/c mice by corn, soybean, | |||
and wheat brans.</strong> Clapp NK, Henke MA, London JF, Shock TL This study was designed to determine | |||
the effects of four well-characterized dietary brans on large bowel tumorigenesis induced in mice with | |||
1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH). Eight-week-old barrier-derived male Balb/c mice were fed a semisynthetic diet | |||
with 20% bran added (either corn, soybean, soft winter wheat, or hard spring wheat) or a no-fiber-added | |||
control diet. Half of each group was given DMH (20 mg/kg body weight/week, subcutaneously for 10 weeks) | |||
beginning at 11 weeks of age. Surviving mice were killed 40 weeks after the first DMH injection. Tumors were | |||
not found in mice not subjected to DMH. In DMH-treated mice, tumors were found almost exclusively in the | |||
distal colon. Tumor incidences were as follows: <strong>controls, 11%; soybean group, 44%; soft winter wheat | |||
group, 48%; hard spring wheat group, 58%; and corn group, 72%. | |||
</strong> | |||
Tumors per tumor-bearing mouse ranged from 1.4 to 1.6, except in the corn group, which had 2.1. <strong>A | |||
positive correlation was found between percentage of neutral detergent fiber in the brans and tumor | |||
incidences</strong> | |||
but not between the individual components of cellulose, hemicellulose, or lignin. The <strong>enhancement of | |||
DMH-induced large bowel tumorigenesis by all four bran types may reflect a species and/or mouse strain | |||
effect that is bran-source related. These data emphasize the importance of using well-defined bran in | |||
all "fiber" studies. | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Prev Med 1987 Jul;16(4):540-4 <strong> | |||
Fiber, stool bulk, and bile acid output: implications for colon cancer risk.</strong> McPherson-Kay R | |||
Dietary fiber has direct effects on stool bulk and bile acid output that may be of relevance in the etiology | |||
of colon cancer. Most types of fiber increase the total volume of stool and reduce the concentration of | |||
specific substances, including bile acids, that are in contact with the bowel wall. However, fibers differ | |||
in their effect on stool bulk, with wheat fiber being a more effective stool bulking agent than fruit and | |||
vegetable fibers. In addition, the extent to which a specific fiber reduces bile acid concentration will be | |||
modified by its concomitant effects on total fecal sterol excretion. Whereas wheat bran reduces fecal bile | |||
acid concentration, <strong>pectin, lignin, and oat bran do not. These three fibers significantly increase | |||
total bile acid output. Bile acids act as promoters of colonic tumors in mutagenesis assay systems and | |||
in various animal models.</strong> Human epidemiological studies show a relationship between various | |||
dietary variables, including fat and fiber intake, fecal concentration of bile acids, and colon cancer risk. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol 1998 Jan;10(1):33-9 <strong>Intestinal absorption of oestrogen: the effect of | |||
altering transit-time.</strong> Lewis SJ, Oakey RE, Heaton KW University Department of Medicine, Bristol | |||
Royal Infirmary, UK. OBJECTIVE: The mechanism by which a high fibre diet may reduce serum oestrogens is | |||
unknown. We hypothesized that time is a rate-limiting factor in oestrogen absorption from the colon so that | |||
changes in colonic transit-rate affect the proportion of oestrogen that is deconjugated and/or absorbed. | |||
AIM: To determine if alteration of intestinal transit rate would influence the absorption of an oral dose of | |||
oestradiol glucuronide. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty healthy postmenopausal women recruited by advertisement. | |||
SETTING: Department of Medicine, Bristol Royal Infirmary. METHODS: Volunteers consumed, in turn, wheat bran, | |||
senna, loperamide and bran shaped plastic flakes, each for 10 days with a minimum 2 week washout period | |||
between study periods, dietary intake being unchanged. Before and in the last 4 days of each intervention | |||
whole-gut transit-time, defecation frequency, stool form, stool beta-glucuronidase activity, stool pH and | |||
the absorption of a 1.5 mg dose of oestradiol glucuronide were measured. RESULTS: Wheat bran, senna and | |||
plastic flakes led to the intended reduction in whole-gut transit-time, increase in defecatory frequency and | |||
increase in stool form score. Loperamide caused the opposite effect. <strong>The length of time the absorbed | |||
oestrogen was detectable in the serum fell with wheat bran and senna, although this was only significant | |||
for oestradiol.</strong> | |||
Oestrone, but not oestradiol, was detectable for a longer time with loperamide. Plastic flakes had no effect | |||
on either oestrogen. Areas under the curve did not change significantly but tended to fall with the three | |||
transit-accelerating agents and to rise with loperamide. CONCLUSION: Our data indicate there is likely to be | |||
an effect of intestinal transit on the absorption of oestrogens but more refined techniques are needed to | |||
characterize this properly. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Br J Cancer 1997;76(3):395-400. <strong> | |||
Lower serum oestrogen concentrations associated with faster intestinal transit.</strong> Lewis SJ, | |||
Heaton KW, Oakey RE, McGarrigle HH University Department of Medicine, Bristol Royal Infirmary, UK. Increased | |||
fibre intake has been shown to reduce serum oestrogen concentrations. We hypothesized that fibre exerts this | |||
effect by decreasing the time available for reabsorption of oestrogens in the colon. We tested this in | |||
volunteers by measuring changes in serum oestrogen levels in response to manipulation of intestinal transit | |||
times with senna and loperamide, then comparing the results with changes caused by wheat bran. Forty healthy | |||
premenopausal volunteers were placed at random into one of three groups. The first group took senna for two | |||
menstrual cycles then, after a washout period, took wheat bran, again for two menstrual cycles. The second | |||
group did the reverse. The third group took loperamide for two menstrual cycles. At the beginning and end of | |||
each intervention a 4-day dietary record was kept and whole-gut transit time was measured; stools were taken | |||
for measurement of pH and beta-glucuronidase activity and blood for measurement of oestrone and oestradiol | |||
and their non-protein-bound fractions and of oestrone sulphate. <strong> | |||
Senna and loperamide caused the intended alterations in intestinal transit, whereas on wheat bran | |||
supplements there was a trend towards faster transit. Serum oestrone sulphate fell with wheat bran (mean | |||
intake 19.8 g day(-1)) and with senna; total- and non-protein-bound oestrone fell with senna.</strong> | |||
No significant changes in serum oestrogens were seen with loperamide. No significant changes were seen in | |||
faecal beta-glucuronidase activity. Stool pH changed only with senna, in which case it fell. In conclusion, | |||
speeding up intestinal transit can lower serum oestrogen concentrations. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1991 Aug;39(2):193-202 <strong>Influence of wheat bran on NMU-induced mammary | |||
tumor development, plasma estrogen levels and estrogen excretion in female rats.</strong> Arts CJ, de | |||
Bie AT, van den Berg H, van 't Veer P, Bunnik GS, Thijssen JH TNO Toxicology and Nutrition Institute, The | |||
Netherlands. In our animal experiments the hypothesis was tested that a high-fiber (HF) diet reduces tumor | |||
promotion<strong> | |||
by interruption of the enterohepatic circulation resulting in lowered estrogen exposure of the | |||
estrogen-sensitive tissue. | |||
</strong> | |||
In the first experiment the development of N-nitrosomethylurea (NMU) induced mammary tumors was | |||
investigated. One group of rats (HF) was fed a HF diet (11% fiber, based on wheat bran), the other group | |||
(LF) fed a low-fiber diet (0.5% fiber, based on white wheat flour). Tumor incidence (90 and 80%, | |||
respectively) and latency (121 and 128 days, respectively) were similar in the HF and LF groups. Compared to | |||
the LF group, HF rats had lower tumor weights (0.16 vs 0.55 g; P less than 0.01) and a slightly lower tumor | |||
multiplicity (1.8 vs 2.8 tumors per tumor-bearing rat). These differences were reduced after adjustment for | |||
body weight. In a second experiment rats, not treated with the carcinogen, were kept on the same HF and LF | |||
diets. From these rats 24-h urine and feces and orbital blood samples were<strong> | |||
collected for analysis of (un)conjugated estrogens. The excretion of both free and conjugated estrogens | |||
in fecal samples was about 3-fold higher in HF rats than in LF rats. During the basal period of the | |||
cycle urinary excretion of estrone was lower in HF rats (mean 9.7 ng/day) than in LF rats (mean 13.0 | |||
ng/day; P less than 0.05). It is concluded that wheat bran interrupts the enterohepatic circulation of | |||
estrogens, but plasma levels are not affected. Whether the development of mammary tumors is reduced by | |||
the introduction of specific components of wheat bran, or by a reduced body weight due to a lower | |||
(effective) energy intake remains to be determined. | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nutr Cancer 1998;31(1):24-30 <strong> | |||
Dietary lignin, and insoluble fiber, enhance uterine cancer but did not influence mammary cancer induced | |||
by N-methyl-N-nitrosourea in rats.</strong> | |||
Birt DF, Markin RS, Blackwood D, Harvell DM, Shull JD, Pennington KL Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer | |||
and Allied Disease, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha 69198, USA. Previous investigations | |||
suggested potential breast cancer-preventive properties of dietary fiber from cabbage. The purpose of the | |||
present investigation was to determine whether lignin, a component of cabbage fiber, would protect against | |||
mammary carcinogenesis by N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) in Sprague-Dawley rats. A six-week study was | |||
conducted using diets containing 0.5-5% dietary wood lignin (a readily available, purified source). These | |||
diets were well tolerated by the rats, and a carcinogenesis study using 5 mg MNU/100 g body wt i.v. at 50 | |||
days of age was conducted, with the 2.5% lignin diet fed from 6 through 8 weeks of age followed by 5% lignin | |||
diet until 20 weeks after MNU. Dietary lignin and MNU treatment increased food consumption (p < 0.05), | |||
and body weight was slightly reduced at 10 and 20 weeks after MNU in the MNU-5% lignin diet group (p < | |||
0.05). Serum estradiol was not altered by dietary lignin or MNU treatment, but uterine weights were highest | |||
in the MNU-control diet group 4 and 12 weeks after MNU. Expression of creatine kinase B, an | |||
estrogen-responsive gene, was lower in the uteri of the MNU-lignin diet group than in other groups at 20 | |||
weeks. Mammary carcinogenesis was not altered by dietary lignin.<strong> | |||
However, uterine endometrial adenocarcinoma was observed only in the MNU-lignin diet group (4 | |||
carcinomas/40 effective rats) (p < 0.05). | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ginecol Obstet Mex 1998 Mar;66:111-8 <strong> | |||
[Estrogens of vegetable origin].</strong> [Article in Spanish] Rubio Lotvin B Reproduccion y de | |||
Ginecologia y Obstetricia Facultad de Medicina, UNAM Depto. de Ginecologia y Obstetricia Hospital Americano, | |||
Britanico Cowdray. Mexico, D.F. In recent years, estrogens of vegetable origin have acquired some importance | |||
that justify the presentation of the available data. The compounds that have estrogenic effect when ingested | |||
as food through<strong> | |||
vegetables include isoflavones, lignines and lactones. The review comprises their chemical | |||
structure,</strong> metabolism and excretion as well as their effect on plasmatic levels of estrogens | |||
FSH, LH and SHBG as well as their activity over lipoproteins and, naturally, their action on menopause | |||
symptoms and breast cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 1995 Jan;208(1):6-12 <strong>Chemical studies of phytoestrogens and related compounds | |||
in dietary supplements: flax and chaparral.</strong> Obermeyer WR, Musser SM, Betz JM, Casey RE, Pohland | |||
AE, Page SW Division of Natural Products, Food and Drug Administration, Washington, District of Columbia | |||
20204. High-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) and mass spectrometric (MS) procedures were developed | |||
to determine lignans in flaxseed (Linum usitatissimum) and chaparral (Larrea tridentata).<strong> | |||
Flaxseed contains high levels of phytoestrogens. Chaparral has been associated with acute nonviral toxic | |||
hepatitis and contains lignans that are structurally similar to known estrogenic compounds. | |||
</strong> | |||
Both flaxseed and chaparral products have been marketed as dietary supplements. A mild enzyme hydrolysis | |||
procedure to prevent the formation of artifacts in the isolation step was used in the determination of | |||
secoisolariciresinol in flaxseed products. HPLC with ultraviolet spectral (UV) or MS detection was used as | |||
the determinative steps. HPLC procedures with UV detection and mass spectrometry were developed to<strong> | |||
characterize the phenolic components, including lignans and flavonoids,</strong> of chaparral and to | |||
direct fractionation studies for the bioassays. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res 1994 Jul 25;652(1):161-3 <strong> | |||
The 21-aminosteroid antioxidant, U74389F, prevents estradiol-induced depletion of hypothalamic | |||
beta-endorphin in adult female rats.</strong> | |||
Schipper HM, Desjardins GC, Beaudet A, Brawer JR Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Bloomfield Centre | |||
for Research in Aging, Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Que., Canada.<strong> | |||
A single intramuscular injection of 2 mg estradiol valerate (EV) results in neuronal degeneration | |||
</strong>and beta-endorphin depletion in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus of adult female rats. We have | |||
hypothesized that peroxidase-positive astrocytes in this brain region oxidize estrogens and | |||
catecholestrogens to semiquinone radicals which mediate oxidative neuronal injury. In the present study, | |||
dietary administration of the potent antioxidant 21-aminosteroid, U-74389F, completely blocked EV-induced | |||
beta-endorphin depletion in the hypothalami of adult female rats. Neither EV nor 21-aminosteroid treatment | |||
had any effect on hypothalamic concentrations of neuropeptide Y and Met-enkephalin, <strong>confirming that | |||
the estradiol lesion is fairly selective for the beta-endorphin cell population. | |||
</strong> | |||
The present findings support the hypothesis that the toxic effect of estradiol on hypothalamic | |||
beta-endorphin neurons is mediated by free radicals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1998 Feb;64(3-4):207-15, <strong>"Effects of tea polyphenols and flavonoids on | |||
liver microsomal glucuronidation of estradiol and estrone."</strong> | |||
Zhu BT, Taneja N, Loder DP, Balentine DA, Conney AH "Administration of 0.5 or 1% lyophilized green tea (5 or | |||
10 mg tea solids per ml, respectively) as the sole source of drinking fluid to female Long-Evans rats for 18 | |||
days stimulated liver microsomal glucuronidation of estrone, estradiol and 4-nitrophenol by 30-37%, 15-27% | |||
and 26-60%, respectively. Oral administration of 0.5% lyophilized green tea to female CD-1 mice for 18 days | |||
stimulated liver microsomal glucuronidation of estrone, estradiol and 4-nitrophenol by 33-37%, 12-22% and | |||
172-191%, respectively. The in vitro addition of a green tea polyphenol mixture, a black tea polyphenol | |||
mixture or (-)-epigallocatechin gallate inhibited rat liver microsomal glucuronidation of estrone and | |||
estradiol in a concentration-dependent manner and their IC50 values for inhibition of estrogen metabolism | |||
were approximately 12.5, 50 and 10 microg/ml, respectively. Enzyme kinetic analysis indicates that the | |||
inhibition of estrone glucuronidation by 10 microM (-)-epigallocatechin gallate was competitive while | |||
inhibition by 50 microM (-)-epigallocatechin gallate was noncompetitive. Similarly, several flavonoids | |||
(naringenin, hesperetin, kaempferol, quercetin, rutin, flavone, alpha-naphthoflavone and | |||
beta-naphthoflavone) also inhibited rat liver microsomal glucuronidation of estrone and estradiol to varying | |||
degrees. Naringenin and hesperetin displayed the strongest inhibitory effects (IC50 value of approximately | |||
25 microM). These two hydroxylated flavonoids had a competitive mechanism of enzyme inhibition for estrone | |||
glucuronidation at a 10 microM inhibitor concentration and a predominantly noncompetitive mechanism of | |||
inhibition at a 50 microM inhibitor concentration." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Toxicology 1997 Sep 26;122(1-2):61-72, <strong> | |||
"Effects of co-administration of butylated hydroxytoluene, butylated hydroxyanisole and flavonoids on | |||
the activation of mutagens and drug-metabolizing enzymes in mice.</strong>" Sun B, Fukuhara M Effects of | |||
co-administration of food additives and naturally occurring food components were studied on the activation | |||
of mutagens. Male mice (ddY) were given diets containing butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) or butylated | |||
hydroxyanisole (BHA) and flavone or flavanone (2,3-dihydroflavone) for two weeks and the ability of hepatic | |||
microsomes to activate aflatoxin B1, benzo[a]pyrene and N-nitrosodimethylamine was determined by the | |||
mutagenicity test. Co-administration of an antioxidant (0.1% BHT or 0.2% BHA in diet) and a flavonoid (0.1% | |||
flavone or 0.1% flavanone) <strong>resulted in additive effects on the activation of aflatoxin B1 and | |||
benzo[a]pyrene,</strong> while the activation of N-nitrosodimethylamine was not elevated significantly | |||
by the co-administration. To understand the mechanism for the additive effects, induction of specific | |||
isozymes of cytochrome P450 involved in the activation of the mutagens was studied. Co-administration of BHT | |||
(0.1%) and flavone (0.1%) increased markedly the levels of proteins and the activities of the enzymes | |||
related to the isozymes of CYP2A and CYP2B, while co-administration of BHA (0.2%) and flavanone (0.1%) | |||
elevated those related to CYP1A. Further, the activation of aflatoxin B1 and benzo[a]pyrene in hepatic | |||
microsomes was inhibited by the antibodies against these isozymes, which suggested that the enhanced | |||
activation of the mutagens by the co-administration might be mediated by the induction of these isozymes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biochem Soc Trans 1977;5(5):1489-92. <strong>Frameshift mutagenicity of certain naturally occurring phenolic | |||
compounds in the 'Salmonella/microsome' test: activation of anthraquinone and flavonol glycosides by gut | |||
bacterial enzymes.</strong> Brown JP, Dietrich PS, Brown RJ | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mutagenesis 1997 Sep;12(5):383-90 <strong> | |||
"Involvement of rat cytochrome 1A1 in the biotransformation of kaempferol to quercetin: relevance to the | |||
genotoxicity of kaempferol.</strong>" Silva ID, Rodrigues AS, Gaspar J, Maia R, Laires A, Rueff J. | |||
"Kaempferol is a flavonoid widely distributed in edible plants and has been shown to be genotoxic to V79 | |||
cells in the absence of external metabolizing systems. The presence of an external metabolizing system, such | |||
as rat liver homogenates (S9 mix), leads to an increase in its genotoxicity, which is attributed to its | |||
biotransformation to <strong>the more genotoxic flavonoid quercetin</strong>, via the cytochrome P450 (CYP) | |||
mono-oxygenase system." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Environ Health Perspect 1997 Apr;105 Suppl 3:633-6 <strong>Dietary estrogens stimulate human breast cells to | |||
enter the cell cycle.</strong> Dees C, Foster JS, Ahamed S, Wimalasena J.<strong> | |||
"Our findings are consistent with a conclusion that dietary estrogens at low concentrations do not act | |||
as antiestrogens, but act like DDT and estradiol to stimulate human breast cancer cells to enter the | |||
cell cycle."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2008. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
</body> | |||
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<html> | |||
<head><title>Oils in Context</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Oils in Context | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
An oil researcher<sup>[0]</sup> | |||
spent 100 days eating what he considered to be the "Eskimo diet," seal blubber and mackerel paste. He | |||
observed that his blood lipid peroxides (measured as malondialdehyde, MDA) reached a level 50 times higher | |||
than normal, and although MDA is teratogenic, he said he wasn't worried about fathering deformed children, | |||
because his sperm count had gone to zero. Evidently, he didn't have a very thorough understanding of the | |||
Eskimo way of life. In most traditional cultures, the whole animal is used for food, including the brain and | |||
the endocrine glands. Since unsaturated fats inhibit thyroid function, and since Eskimos usually have a high | |||
caloric intake but are not typically obese, it seems that` their metabolic rate is being promoted by | |||
something in their diet, which might also be responsible for protecting them from the effects experienced by | |||
the oil researcher. (According to G. W. Crile, the basal metabolic rate of Eskimos was 125% of that of | |||
people in the United States.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
People who eat fish heads (or other animal heads) generally consume the thyroid gland, as well as the brain. | |||
The brain is the body's richest source of cholesterol, which, with adequate thyroid hormone and vitamin A, | |||
is converted into the steroid hormones pregnenolone, progesterone, and DHEA, in proportion to the quantity | |||
circulating in blood in low-density lipoproteins. The brain is also the richest source of these very | |||
water-insoluble (hydrophobic) steroid hormones; it has a concentration about 20 times higher than the serum, | |||
for example. The active thyroid hormone is also concentrated many-fold in the brain. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) is known to be low in people who are susceptible to heart disease <sup | |||
>[1]</sup> or cancer, and all three of these steroids have a broad spectrum of protective actions. Thyroid | |||
hormone, vitamin A, and cholesterol, which are used to produce the protective steroids, have been found to | |||
have a similarly broad range of protective effects, even when used singly. For example, according to | |||
MacCallum, | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It has been shown that certain lipoid substances, especially cholesterine, can act as inhibiting or | |||
neutralizing agents toward such haemolytic poisons as saponin, cobra poison, etc., through forming with them | |||
an innocuous compound. Hanes showed that the relative immunity of puppies from chloroform poisoning is due | |||
to the large amount of cholesterin esters in their tissues. When artificially introduced into the tissues of | |||
adult animals a similar protection is conferred.<sup>[2]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A high level of serum cholesterol is practically diagnostic of hypothyroidism, and can be seen as an | |||
adaptive attempt to maintain adequate production of the protective steroids. Broda Barnes' work clearly | |||
showed that hypothyroid populations are susceptible to infections, heart disease, and cancer. <sup>[3]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1940s, some of the toxic effects of fish oil (such as testicular degeneration, softening of the | |||
brain, muscle damage, and spontaneous cancer) were found to result from an induced vitamin E deficiency. | |||
Unfortunately, there isn't much reason to think that just supplementing vitamin E will provide general | |||
protection against the unsaturated fats. The half-life of fats in human adipose tissue is about 600 days, | |||
meaning that significant amounts of previously consumed oils will still be present up to four years after | |||
they have been removed from the diet. <sup>[4]</sup> | |||
According to Draper, et al., <sup>[5]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>, , , </strong> | |||
enrichment of the tissues with highly unsaturated fatty acids results in an increase in lipid peroxidation | |||
in vivo even in the presence of normal concentrations of vitamin E. Fasting for more than 24 hours also | |||
results in an increase in MDA excretion, implying that lipolysis is associated with peroxidation of the | |||
fatty acids released. | |||
</p> | |||
<h2 align="justify"> | |||
According to Lemeshko, et al., it seems that this effect increases with the age of the animal. <sup>[6]</sup | |||
> | |||
</h2> | |||
<p> | |||
Commercial advertising (including medical conferences sponsored by pharmaceutical companies) and | |||
commercially sponsored research are creating some false impressions about the role of unsaturated oils in | |||
the diet. Like the man who poisoned himself with the "Eskimo diet," many people focus so intently on | |||
avoiding one problem that they create other problems. Since I have discussed the association of unsaturated | |||
fats with aging, lipofuscin, and estrogen elsewhere, I will outline some of the other problems associated | |||
with the oils, especially as they relate to hormones. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Mechanisms and Essentiality: | |||
</strong> When something is unavoidable, in ordinary life, talking about "essentiality," or the minimum | |||
amount required for life or for optimal health, is more important as an exploration into the nature of our | |||
life than as a practical health issue. For example, how much oxygen, how many germs (of what kinds), how | |||
many cosmic rays (of what kinds), would produce the nicest human beings? The fact that we have adapted to | |||
something---oxygen at sea level, microbes, or vegetable fats, for example--doesn't mean that we are normally | |||
exposed to it in ideal amounts. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Animals contain desaturase enzymes, and are able to produce specific unsaturated fats (from oleic and | |||
palmitoleic acids) when deprived of the ordinary "essential fatty acids," <sup>[7]</sup> so it can be | |||
assumed that these enzymes have a vital purpose. The high concentration of unsaturated fats in | |||
mitochondria--the respiratory organelles where it seems that these lipids present a special danger of | |||
destructive oxidation--suggests that they are required for mitochondrial structure, or function, or | |||
regulation, or reproduction. Unsaturated fats have special properties of adsorption, <sup>[8]</sup> and are | |||
more soluble in water than are saturated fats. The movement and modulation of proteins and nucleic acids | |||
might require these special properties. As the main site of ATP production, I suspect that their | |||
water-retaining property might be crucial. When a protein solution (even egg-white) is poured into a high | |||
concentration of ATP, it contracts or "superprecipitates." This condensing, water-expelling property of ATP | |||
in protein solutions is similar to the effect of certain concentrations of salts on any polymer. It would | |||
seem appropriate to have a substance to oppose this condensing effect, to stimulate swelling <sup>[9, | |||
10]</sup> and the uptake of precursor substances. Something that has an intrinsic structure-loosening or | |||
water-retaining effect would be needed. The ideas of "chaotropic agents" and "structural antioxidants" have | |||
been proposed by Vladimirov <sup>[11]</sup> to bring generality into our understanding of the mitochondria. | |||
Lipid peroxides are among the chaotropic agents, and thyroxin is among the structural antioxidants. The | |||
known oxygen-sparing effects of progesterone <sup>[12, 13]</sup> would make it appropriate to include it | |||
among the structural antioxidants. The incorporation of the wrong unsaturated fats into mitochondria would | |||
be expected to damage the vital respiratory functions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some insects that have been studied have been found not to require the essential fatty acids. <sup>[14]</sup | |||
>* According to reviewers, hogs and humans have not been shown to require the "essential" fatty acids. <sup | |||
>[15]</sup> In vitro studies indicate that they are not required for human diploid cells to continue | |||
dividing in culture. <sup> | |||
[16] | |||
</sup> According to Guarnieri, <sup>[17]</sup> EFA-deficient animals don't die from their deficiency. The | |||
early studies showing "essentiality" of unsaturated fats, by producing skin problems and an increased | |||
metabolic rate, have been criticized <sup>[18]</sup> in the light of better nutritional information, e.g., | |||
pointing out that the diets might have been deficient in vitamin B6 and/or biotin. The similar skin | |||
condition produced by vitamin B6 deficiency was found to be improved by adding unsaturated fats to the diet. | |||
A fat-free liver extract cured the "EFA deficiency." I think it would be reasonable to investigate the | |||
question of the increased metabolic rate produced by a diet lacking unsaturated fats (which inhibit both | |||
thyroid function and protein metabolism) in relation to the biological changes that have been observed. | |||
Since diets rich in protein are known to increase the requirement for vitamin B6 <sup>[19]</sup> (which is a | |||
co-factor of transaminases, for example), the increased rate of energy production and improved digestibility | |||
of dietary protein on a diet lacking unsaturated fats would certainly make it reasonable to provide the | |||
experimental animals with increased amount of other nutrients. With increasing knowledge, the old | |||
experiments indicating the "essentiality" of certain oils have lost their ability to convince, and they | |||
haven't been replaced by new and meaningful demonstrations. In the present state of knowledge, I don't think | |||
it would be unreasonable to suggest that the optional dietary level of the "essential fatty acids" might be | |||
close to zero, if other dietary factors were also optimized. The practical question, though, has to do with | |||
the dietary choices that can be made at the present time. | |||
</p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
*If we followed Linus Pauling's reasoning in determining optimal vitamin C intake, this study of the | |||
linoleic acid content of the tissues of an animal which can synthesize it would suggest that we are eating | |||
about 100 times more "EFA" than we should. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In evaluating dietary fat, it is too often forgotten that the animals' diet (and other factors, including | |||
temperature) affect the degree of saturation of fats in its tissues, or its milk, or eggs. The fat of wild | |||
rabbits or summer-grazing horses, for example, can contain 40% linolenic acid, about the same as linseed | |||
oil. Hogs fed soybeans can have fat containing over 30% linoleic acid. <sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Considering that most of our food animals are fed large amounts of grains and soybeans, it isn't accurate to | |||
speak of their fats as "animal fats." And, considering the vegetable oil contained in our milk, eggs, and | |||
meat, it would seem logical to select other foods that are not rich in unsaturated oils. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Temperature and Fat:</strong> The fact that saturated fats are dominant in tropical plants and in | |||
warm-blooded animals relates to the stability of these oils at high temperatures. Coconut oil which had been | |||
stored at room temperature for a year was found to have no measurable rancidity. Since growing coconuts | |||
often experience temperatures around 100 degrees Fahrenheit, ordinary room temperature isn't an oxidative | |||
challenge. Fish oil or safflower oil, though, can't be stored long at room temperature, and at 98 degrees F, | |||
the spontaneous oxidation is very fast. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bacteria vary the kind of fat they synthesize, according to temperature, forming more saturated fats at | |||
higher temperatures.<sup>[21]</sup> The same thing has been observed in seed oil plants. <sup>[22]</sup> | |||
Although sheep have highly saturated fat, the superficial fat near their skin is relatively unsaturated; it | |||
would obviously be inconvenient for the sheep if their surface fat hardened in cool weather, when their skin | |||
temperature drops considerably. Pigs wearing sweaters were found to have more saturated fat than other | |||
pigs.<sup>[23]</sup> | |||
Fish, which often live in water which is only a few degrees above freezing, couldn't function with hardened | |||
fat. At temperatures which are normal for fish, and for seeds which germinate in the cold northern | |||
springtime, rancidity of fats isn't a problem, but rigidity would be. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Unsaturated Fats Are Essentially Involved In Heart Damage: | |||
</strong> | |||
The toxicity of unsaturated oils for the heart is well established, <sup> | |||
[24, 25, 26]</sup> though not well known by the public. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 1962, it was found that unsaturated fatty acids are directly toxic to mitochondria. <sup>[27]</sup> Since | |||
stress increases the amount of free fatty acids circulating in the blood (as well as lipid peroxides), and | |||
since lack of oxygen increases the intracellular concentration of free fatty acids, stored unsaturated fats | |||
would seem to represent a special danger to the stressed organism. Meerson and his colleagues <sup> | |||
[18]</sup> have demonstrated that stress liberates even local tissue fats in the heart during stress, | |||
and that systematic drug treatment, including antioxidants, can stop the enlargement of stress-induced | |||
infarctions. Recently, it was found that the cardiac necrosis caused by unsaturated fats (linolenic acid, in | |||
particular) could be prevented by a cocoa butter supplement. <sup>[29]</sup> The author suggests that this | |||
is evidence for the "essentiality" of saturated fats, but points out that animals normally can produce | |||
enough saturated fat from dietary carbohydrate or protein, to prevent cardiac necrosis, unless the diet | |||
provides too much unsaturated fat. A certain proportion of saturated fat appears to be necessary for | |||
stability of the mitochondria. Several other recent studies show that the "essential" fatty acids decrease | |||
the P/O ratio, or the phosphorylation efficiency, <sup>[30]</sup> the amount of usable energy produced by | |||
cellular respiration. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There has been some publicity about a certain unsaturated fat, eicosapentaenoic acid, or EPA, which can have | |||
some apparently protective and anti-inflammatory effects. A study in which butter was added to the animals' | |||
diet found that serum EPA was elevated by the butter. The investigator pointed out that other studies had | |||
been able to show increased serum EPA from an EPA supplement only when the animals had previously been fed | |||
butter.<sup> [31]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Intense lobbying by the soybean oil industry has created the widespread belief that "tropical oils" cause | |||
heart disease. In a comparison of many kinds of oil, including linseed oil, olive oil, whale oil, etc., palm | |||
oil appeared to be the most protective. The same researcher <sup> | |||
[32]</sup> more recently studied palm oil's antithrombotic effect, in relation to platelet aggregation. | |||
It was found that platelet aggregation was enhanced by sunflowerseed oil, but that palm oil tended to | |||
decrease it. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Much current research has concentrated on the factors involved in arterial clotting. Since the blood moves | |||
quickly through the arteries, rapid processes are of most interest to those workers, though some people do | |||
remember to think in terms of an equilibrium between formation and removal of clot material. For about 25 | |||
years there was interest in the ability of vitamin E to facilitate clot removal, apparently by activating | |||
proteolytic enzymes.<sup>[33]</sup> Unsaturated fats' ability to inhibit proteolytic enzymes in the blood | |||
has occasionally been discussed, but seldom in the U.S. The equilibrium between clotting and clot | |||
dissolution is especially important in the veins, where blood moves more slowly, and spends more time. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>. . . </strong> | |||
the slower blood flows the greater its predisposition to clotting. However, this intrinsic process, leading | |||
to fibrin production, is slow, taking up to a minute or more to occur. Thrombosis as a result of stasis, | |||
therefore, occurs in the venous circulation; typically in the legs where"venous return is slowest. In fact, | |||
many thousands of small thrombi are formed each day in the lower body. These pass via the vena cava into the | |||
lungs where thrombolysis occurs, this being a normal metabolic function of the organ. <sup>[34]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the Shutes' research in the 1930s and 1040s, vitamin E and estrogen acted in opposite directions on the | |||
clot-removing enzymes.<sup>[33]</sup> | |||
Since estrogen increases blood lipids, and increases the incidence of strokes and heart attacks, it would be | |||
interesting to expand the Shutes' work by considering the degree of saturation of blood lipids in relation | |||
to the effects of vitamin E and estrogen on clot removal. Estrogen's effect on clotting is very complex, | |||
since it increases the ratio of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids in the body, and increases the tendency | |||
of blood to pool in the large veins, in addition to its direct effects on the clotting factors. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Immunodeficiency and Unsaturated Fats: | |||
</strong>Intravenous feeding with unsaturated fats is powerfully immunosuppressive <sup>[35]</sup> (though | |||
it often was used to give more calories to cancer patients) and is now advocated as a way to prevent graft | |||
rejection. The deadly effect of the long-chain unsaturated fats on the immune system has led to the | |||
development of new products containing short and medium-chain saturated fats for intravenous feeding. <sup | |||
>[36]</sup> It was recently reported that the anti-inflammatory effect of n-3 fatty acids (fish oil) might | |||
be related to the observed suppression of interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor by those fats. <sup | |||
>[37]</sup> The suppression of these anti-tumor immune factors persists after the fish oil treatment is | |||
stopped. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As mentioned above, stress and hypoxia can cause cells to take up large amounts of fatty acids. Cortisol's | |||
ability to kill white blood cells (which can be inhibited by extra glucose) is undoubtedly an important part | |||
of its immunosuppressive effect, and this killing is mediated by causing the cells to take up unsaturated | |||
fats. <sup>[38]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Several aspects of the immune system are improved by short-chain saturated fats. Their anti-histamine action | |||
<sup>[39]</sup> is probably important, because of histamine's immunosuppressive effects.<sup>[40]</sup> | |||
Unsaturated fats have been found to cause degranulation of mast cells.<sup>[41]</sup> | |||
The short-chain fatty acids normally produced by bacteria in the bowel apparently have a local | |||
anti-inflammatory action.<sup>[42]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A recent discussion of "tissue destruction by neutrophils" mentions "a fascinating series of experiments | |||
performed between 1888 and 1906," in which "German and American scientists established the importance of | |||
neutrophil proteinases and plasma antiproteinases in the evolution of tissue damage in vivo." <sup>[43]</sup | |||
> | |||
MacCallum's <em>Pathology </em>described some related work: | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>. . . </strong> | |||
Jobling has shown that the decomposition products of some fats--unsaturated fatty acids and their | |||
soaps--have the most decisive inhibiting action upon proteolytic ferments, their power being in a sense | |||
proportional to the degree of unsaturation of the fatty acid. So universally is it true that such | |||
unsaturated fatty acids can impede the action of proteolytic ferments that many pathological conditions | |||
(such as the persistence of caseous tuberculous material in its solid form) can be shown to be due to their | |||
presence. If they are rendered impotent by saturation of their unsaturated group with iodine, the | |||
proteolysis goes on rapidly and the caseous tubercle or gumma rapidly softens.<sup>[44]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Another comment by MacCallum suggests one way in which unsaturated fats could block the action of cytotoxic | |||
cells: | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This function of the wandering cells is, of course, of immediate importance in connection with their task of | |||
cleaning up the injured area to prepare it for repair. While the proteases thus produced are active in the | |||
solution of undesirable material, their unbridled action might be detrimental. As a matter of fact, it is | |||
shown by Jobling and Petersen that the anti-ferment known to be present in the serum and to restrict the | |||
action of the ferment is a recognizable chemical substance, usually a soap or other combination of an | |||
unsaturated fatty acid. It is possible to remove or decompose this substance or to saturate the fatty acid | |||
with iodine and thus release the ferment to its full activity. <sup>[45]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Unsaturated Fats Are Essential For Cancer: | |||
</strong> | |||
The inhibition of proteolytic enzymes by unsaturated fats will act at many sites: digestion of protein, | |||
"digestion" of clots, "digestion" of the colloid in the thyroid gland which releases the hormones, the | |||
activity of white cells mentioned above, and the normal "digestion" of cytoplasmic proteins involved in | |||
maintaining a steady state as new proteins are formed and added to the cytoplasm. It has been suggested that | |||
inhibition of the destruction of intracellular proteins would shift the balance toward growth.<sup>[46]</sup | |||
> | |||
Cancer cells are known to have a high level of unsaturated fats,<sup>[47]</sup> | |||
yet they have a low level of lipid peroxidation;<sup>[48]</sup> lipid peroxidation inhibits growth, and is | |||
often mentioned as a normal growth restraining factor.<sup>[49]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 1927, it was observed that a diet lacking fats prevented the development of spontaneous tumors.[50] Many | |||
subsequent investigators have observed that the unsaturated fats are essential for the development of | |||
tumors. <sup>[51, 52, 53]</sup> Tumors secrete a factor which mobilizes fats from storage, <sup>[54]</sup> | |||
presumably guaranteeing their supply in abundance until the adipose tissues are depleted. Saturated | |||
fats--coconut oil and butter, for example--do not promote tumor growth.<sup>[55]</sup> Olive oil is not a | |||
strong tumor promoter, but in some experiments it does have a slightly permissive effect on tumor growth. | |||
<sup>[56, 57]</sup> In some experiments, the carcinogenic action of unsaturated fats could be offset by | |||
added thyroid, <sup>[57]</sup> | |||
an observation which might suggest that at least part of the effect of the oil is to inhibit thyroid. Adding | |||
cystine to the diet (cysteine, the reduced form of cystine, is a thyroid antagonist) also increases the | |||
tumor incidence.<sup>[58]</sup> In a hyperthyroid state, the ability to quickly oxidize larger amounts of | |||
the toxic oils would very likely have a protective effect, preventing storage and subsequent peroxidation, | |||
and reducing the oils' ability to synergize with estrogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Consumption of unsaturated fat has been associated with both skin aging and with the sensitivity of the skin | |||
to ultraviolet damage, Ultraviolet light-induced skin cancer seems to be mediated by unsaturated fats and | |||
lipid peroxidation.<sup>[59]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In a detailed study of the carcinogenicity of different quantities of unsaturated fat, Ip, et al., tested | |||
levels ranging from 0.5% to 10%, and found that the cancer incidence varied with the amount of "essential | |||
oils" in the diet. Some of their graphs make the point very clearly:<sup> | |||
[52}</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This suggests that the optimal EFA intake might be 0.5% or less. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Butter and coconut oil contain significant amounts of the short and medium-chain saturated fatty acids, | |||
which are very easily metabolized,<sup>[60]</sup> | |||
inhibit the release of histamine,<sup>[39]</sup> promote differentiation of cancer cells,<sup>[61]</sup> | |||
tend to counteract the stress-induced proteins,<sup>[62]</sup> decrease the expression of prolactin | |||
receptors, and promote the expression of the T3 (thyroid) receptor. <sup>[63] </sup> | |||
(A defect of the thyroid receptor molecule has been identified as an "oncogene," responsible for some | |||
cancers, as has a defect in the progesterone receptor.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides inhibiting the thyroid gland, the unsaturated fats impair intercellular communication,[64] suppress | |||
several immune functions that relate to cancer, and are present at high concentrations in cancer cells, | |||
where their antiproteolytic action would be expected to interfere with the proteolytic enzymes and to shift | |||
the equilibrium toward growth. In the free fatty acid form, the unsaturated fats are toxic to the | |||
mitochondria, but cancer cells are famous for their compensatory glycolysis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By using lethargic connective tissue cells known to have a very low propensity to take up unsaturated fats | |||
<sup>[65]</sup> as controls in comparison with, e.g., breast cancer cells, with a high affinity for fats, it | |||
is possible to show a "selective" toxicity of oils for cancer cells. However, an in vivo test of an | |||
alph-linolenic acid ester showed it to have a stimulating effect on breast cancer.<sup>[66]</sup> | |||
Given a choice, skin fibroblasts demonstrate a very specific preference for oleic acid, over a | |||
polyunsaturated fat.<sup>[67]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Even if unsaturated fats were (contrary to the best evidence) selectively toxic for cancer cells, their use | |||
in cancer chemotherapy would have to deal with the issues of their tendency to cause pulmonary | |||
embolism,their suppression of immunity including factors specifically involved in cancer resistance, and | |||
their carcinogenicity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Brain Damage And Lipid Peroxidation: | |||
</strong> | |||
When pregnant mice were fed either coconut oil or unsaturated seed oil, the mice that got coconut oil had | |||
babies with normal brains and intelligence, but the mice exposed to the unsaturated oil had smaller brains, | |||
and had inferior intelligence. In another experiment, radioactively labeled soy oil was given to nursing | |||
rats, and it was shown to be massively incorporated into brain cells, and to cause visible structural | |||
changes in the cells. In 1980, shortly after this study was published in Europe, the U.S. Department of | |||
Agriculture issued a recommendation against the use of soy oil in infant formulas. More recently, <sup | |||
>[68]</sup> pregnant rats and their offspring were given soy lecithin with their food, and the exposed | |||
offspring developed sensorimotor defects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many other studies have demonstrated that excessive unsaturated dietary fats interfere with learning and | |||
behavior, <sup>[70, 71]</sup> and the fact that some of the effects can be reduced with antioxidants | |||
suggests that lipid peroxidation causes some of the damage. Other studies are investigating the involvement | |||
of lipid peroxidation in seizures.<sup>[72]</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The past use of soy oil in artificial milk (and in maternal diets) has probably caused some brain damage. | |||
The high incidence of neurological defects (e.g., 90%) that has been found among violent criminals suggests | |||
that it might be worthwhile to look for unusual patterns of brain lipids in violent people. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There have been a series of claims that babies' brains or eyes develop better when their diets are | |||
supplemented with certain unsaturated oils, based on the idea that diets may be deficient in certain types | |||
of oil, Some experimenters claim that the supplements have improved the mental development of babies, but | |||
other researchers find that the supplemented babies have poorer mental development. But the oils that are | |||
added to the babies' diets are derived from fish or algae, and contain a great variety of substances (such | |||
as vitamins) other than the unsaturated fatty acids, and the researchers consistently fail to control for | |||
the effects of such substances. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It has shown that it is probably impossible to experience a detectable deficiency of linoleic acid outside | |||
of the laboratory setting,<sup>[69]</sup> but the real issue is probably whether the amount in the normal | |||
diet is harmful to development. Until the research with animals has produced a better understanding of the | |||
effects of unsaturated oils, experimenting on human babies seems hard to justify. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Marion Diamond, who has studied the improved brain growth in rats given a stimulating environment (which, | |||
like prenatal progesterone, produced improved intelligence and larger brains), observed that in old age the | |||
"enriched" rats' brains contained less lipofuscin (age pigment).<sup>[73]</sup> | |||
It is generally agreed that the unsaturated oils promote the formation of age pigment. The discovery that | |||
stress or additional cortisone (which, by blocking the use of glucose, forces cells to take up more fat) | |||
causes accelerated aging of the brain<sup>[74]</sup> should provide new motivation to investigate the | |||
antistress properties of substances such as the protective steroids mentioned above, and the short-chain | |||
saturated fats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Essential for Liver Damage:</strong> Both experimental and epidemiological studies have shown that | |||
dietary linoleic acid is required for the development of alcoholic liver damage.<sup>[75] </sup> | |||
Animals fed tallow and ethanol had no liver injury, but even 0.7% or 2.5% linoleic acid with ethanol caused | |||
fatty liver, necrosis, and inflammation. Dietary cholesterol at a level of 2% was found to cause no | |||
harm,<sup>[76]</sup> | |||
but omitting it entirely from the diet caused leakage of amino-transferase enzymes. This effect of the | |||
absence of cholesterol was very similar to the effects of the presence of linoleic acid with ethanol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Obesity: </strong> | |||
For many years studies have been demonstrating that dietary coconut oil causes decreased fat synthesis and | |||
storage, when compared with diets containing unsaturated fats. More recently, this effect has been discussed | |||
as a possible treatment for obesity.<sup>[77]</sup> | |||
The short-chain fats in coconut oil probably improve tissue response to the thyroid hormone (T3), and its | |||
low content of unsaturated fats might allow a more nearly optimal function of the thyroid gland and of | |||
mitochondria. A survey of other tropical fruits' content of short and medium chain fatty acids might be | |||
useful, to find lower calorie foods which contain significant amounts of the shorter-chain fats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Other Problem Areas: | |||
</strong> The presence of palmitate in the lung surfactant phospholipids<sup>[78]</sup> suggests that | |||
maternal overload with unsaturated fats might interfere with the formation of these important substances, | |||
causing breathing problems in the newborn. The bone-calcium mobilizing effect of prostaglandins suggests | |||
that dietary fats might affect osteoporosis; the absence of osteoporosis in some tropical populations might | |||
relate to their consumption of coconut oil and other saturated tropical oils. The steroids which occur in | |||
association with some seed oils might be nutritionally significant, in the way animal hormones in foods | |||
undoubtedly are. For example, soy steroids can be converted by bowel bacteria into estrogens. R. Marker, et | |||
al., found diosgenin (the material in the Mexican yam from which progesterone, etc., are derived) in a palm | |||
kernel, <em>Balanites aegyptica (Wall)</em>.<sup>[79]</sup> | |||
Another palm fruit also contains sterols with anti-androgenic and anti-edematous actions.<sup>[80, 81] | |||
</sup> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If the amount of ingested unsaturated fats (inhibitors of protein digestion) were lower, protein | |||
requirements might be lower. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The similar effects of estrogen and of polyunsaturated fats (PUFA) are numerous. They include antagonism to | |||
vitamin E and thyroid, to respiration and proteolysis; promotion of lipofuscin formation and of clot | |||
formation, promotion of seizure activity, impairment of brain development and learning; and involvement in | |||
positive or negative regulation of cell division, depending on cell type. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
These parallels suggest that the role of PUFA in reproduction might be similar to that of estrogen, namely, | |||
the promotion of uterine and breast cell proliferation, water uptake, etc. Such parallels should be a | |||
caution in generalizing from the conditions which are essential for reproduction to the conditions which are | |||
compatible with full development and full functional capacity. If a certain small amount of dietary PUFA is | |||
essential for reproduction, but for no other life function, then it is analogous to the brief "estrogen | |||
surge," which must quickly be balanced by opposing hormones. The present approach to contraception through | |||
estrogen-induced miscarriage might give way to fertility regulation by diet. A self-actualizing | |||
pro-longevity diet, low in PUFA, might prolong our characteristically human condition of delayed | |||
reproductive maturity, and, if PUFA are really essential for reproduction, unsaturated vegetable oils could | |||
temporarily be added to the diet when reproduction is desired. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Conclusions:</strong> | |||
Polyunsaturated fats are nearly ubiquitous, but if they are "essential nutrients," in the way vitamin A, or | |||
lysine, is essential, that has not been demonstrated. It seems clear that they <em>are </em> | |||
essential for cancer, and that they have other properties which cause them to be toxic at certain levels. It | |||
might be time to direct research toward determining whether there is a threshold of toxicity, or whether | |||
they are, like ionizing radiation, toxic at any level. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong>Note:</strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>A possible mitochondrial site for toxicity: | |||
</strong> | |||
In 1971 I was trying to combine some of the ideas of Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, Otto Warburg, W. F. Koch, and L. | |||
C. Strong. I was interested in the role of ubiquinone in mitochondrial respiration. In one experiment, I was | |||
using paper chromatography to compare oils that I had extracted from liver with vitamin E and with | |||
commercially purified ubiquinone. Besides using the pure substances, I decided to combine vitamin E with | |||
ubiquinone for another test spot. As soon as I combined the two oils, their amber and orange colors turned | |||
to an inky, greenish black color. I tested both bacterial and mammalian ubiquinone, and benzoquinone, and | |||
they all produced similar colors with vitamin E. When I ran the solvent up the paper, the vitamin E and the | |||
ubiquinone traveled at slightly different speeds. The black spot, containing the mixture, also moved, but | |||
each substance moved at its own speed, and as the materials separated, their original lighter colors | |||
reappeared. Charge-transfer bonds, which characteristically produce dark colors, are very weak bonds. I | |||
think this must have been that kind of bond. Years later, I tried to repeat the experiment, using | |||
"ubiquinone" from various capsules that were sold for medical use. Instead of the waxy yellow-orange | |||
material I had used before, these capsules contained a liquid oil with a somewhat yellow color. Very likely, | |||
the ubiquinone was dissolved in vegetable oil. At the time, I was puzzled that the color reaction didn't | |||
occur, but later I realized that a solvent containing double bonds (e.g., soy oil or other oil containing | |||
PUFA) would very likely prevent the close association between vitamin E and ubiquinone which is necessary | |||
for charge-transfer to occur. Since I think Koch and Szent-Gyorgyi were right in believing that electronic | |||
activation is the most important feature of the living state, I think the very specific electronic | |||
interaction between vitamin E and ubiquinone must play an important role in the respiratory function of | |||
ubiquinone. Ubiquinone is known to be a part of the electron transport chain which can leak electrons, so | |||
this might be one of the ways in which vitamin E can prevent the formation of toxic free-radicals. If it can | |||
prevent the "leakage" of electrons, then this in itself would improve respiratory efficiency. If unsaturated | |||
oils interfere with this very specific but delicate bond, then this could explain, at least partly, their | |||
toxicity for mitochondria. ["Electron leak" reference: B. Halliwell, in <em>Age Pigments</em> (R. S. Sohal, | |||
ed.), pp. 1-62, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1981.] | |||
</p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
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37(1-2), 27-32, 1979. | |||
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Harig, J. M., et al., "Treatment of diversion colitis with short-chain-fatty acid irrigation," N. Engl. | |||
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<li>Ibid., p. 162.</li> | |||
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</ol> | |||
<p>© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com</p> | |||
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<strong>Osteoporosis, aging, tissue renewal, and product science</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The incidence of osteoporosis, like obesity, has been increasing in recent decades. The number of hip | |||
fractures in many countries has doubled in the last 30 or 40 years (Bergstrom, et al., 2009). An exception | |||
to that trend was Australia in the period between 2001 and 2006, where the annual incidence of hip fractures | |||
in women over 60 years old decreased by 28.3%. During those years, the number of prescriptions for "hormone | |||
replacement therapy" decreased by 54.6%, and the number of prescriptions for bisphosphonate increased by | |||
245%. The publication of the Women's Health Initiative results in 2002 (showing that the Prem-Pro treatment | |||
caused breast cancer, heart attacks, and dementia), led to a great decrease in the use of estrogen | |||
treatments everywhere. After the FDA approved estrogen's use in 1972 for the prevention of osteoporosis the | |||
number of women using it increased greatly, and by 1994, 44% of women in the US had used it. After the WHI | |||
results were published, the number of prescriptions for "HRT" fell by more than half, and following that | |||
decrease in estrogen sales, the incidence of breast cancer decreased by 9% in women between the ages of 50 | |||
and 54.With the incidence of hip fractures increasing while the percentage of women using estrogen was | |||
increasing, it seems likely that there is something wrong with the theory that osteoporosis is caused by an | |||
estrogen deficiency. That theory was derived from the theory that menopause was the consequence of ovarian | |||
failure, resulting from the failure to ovulate and produce estrogen when the supply of eggs was depleted. | |||
The theory was never more than an ideological preference, but the estrogen industry saw it as an opportunity | |||
to create a huge market.There are many studies that seem to imply that the greater incidence of osteoporotic | |||
fractures among women is the result of their exposure to estrogen during their reproductive years. This | |||
would be analogous to the understanding that it is the cumulative exposure to estrogen that ages the nerves | |||
in the hypothalamus that control the cyclic release of the gonadotropic hormones, causing the | |||
menopause.<strong>. . . the nature of science itself changed around the middle of the last century, becoming | |||
product and disease oriented, so that now relatively few people are continuing to study bones | |||
objectively.</strong>Animal studies show that estrogen stunts growth, including bone growth. The high | |||
estrogen levels in girls' teen years and early twenties accounts for the fact that women's bones are lighter | |||
than men's. In rat studies, treatment with estrogen was found to enlarge the space between the jawbone and | |||
the teeth, which is a factor in periodontal disease (Elzay, 1964). Teeth are very similar to bones, so it's | |||
interesting that treating male or female rats with estrogen increases their incidence of tooth decay, and | |||
removing their gonads was found to decrease the incidence (Muhler and Shafer, 1952). Supplementing them with | |||
thyroid hormone decreased the incidence of cavities in both males and females (Bixler, et al., 1957).One of | |||
the "estrogen receptors" appears to actively contribute to bone loss (Windahl, et al., 1999, 2001). Studies | |||
in dogs following the removal of their ovaries found that there was an increase of bone remodeling and bone | |||
formation rate in the first month, followed by a few months of slowed bone formation, but that by 10 months | |||
after the surgery the bones had returned to their normal remodeling rate, and that "at no time was a | |||
significant reduction in bone volume detected" (Boyce, et al., 1990). With the removal of the ovaries, the | |||
production of progesterone as well as estrogen is affected, but the adrenal glands and other tissues can | |||
produce those hormones.Until the influence of the estrogen industry overwhelmed it, ordinary science was | |||
studying bone development in comprehensive ways, understanding its biological roles and the influences of | |||
the environment on it. But the nature of science itself changed around the middle of the last century, | |||
becoming product and disease oriented, so that now relatively few people are continuing to study bones | |||
objectively.The outstanding physical-chemical property of bone is that it is a reservoir-buffer of carbon | |||
dioxide, able to bind huge amounts of the gas into its structure.When carbon dioxide increases in the | |||
bloodstream it is at first absorbed rapidly by the bones, and if the blood level of CO2 is kept high day | |||
after day, the rate of absorption gradually slows down, but in experiments that have continued for several | |||
weeks the bones were still slowly absorbing more carbon dioxide; the absorption curve seems to be | |||
asymptotic. When people move to or from high altitudes, their bones appear to continue adapting to the | |||
different gas pressures for years. A reduction of atmospheric pressure (which allows the tissues to retain | |||
more carbon dioxide) helps to reduce the calcium loss caused by immobility (Litovka and Berezovs'ka, 2003; | |||
Berezovs'kyi, et al., 2000), and promotes the healing of damaged bone (Bouletreau, et al., 2002). Ultrasound | |||
treatment, which accelerates bone healing, stimulates processes similar to reduced oxygen supply (Tang, et | |||
al., 2007). The mineral in newly formed bone is calcium carbonate, and this is gradually changed to include | |||
a large amount of calcium phosphate. Besides forming part of the mineral, carbon dioxide is also | |||
incorporated into a protein (in a process requiring vitamin K), in a process that causes this protein, | |||
osteocalcin, to bind calcium. The osteocalcin protein is firmly bonded to a collagen molecule. Collagen | |||
forms about 30% of the mass of bone; several percent of the bone consists of other organic molecules, | |||
including osteocalcin, and the rest of the mass of the bone consists of mineral.Thyroid hormone is essential | |||
for forming carbon dioxide. In the early 1940s, experimental rabbits were fed their standard diet, with the | |||
addition of 1% desiccated thyroid gland, which would be equivalent to about 150 grains of Armour thyroid for | |||
a person. They became extremely hypermetabolic, and couldn't eat enough to meet their nutritional needs for | |||
growth and tissue maintenance. When they died, all of their tissues weighed much less than those of animals | |||
that hadn't received the toxic dose of thyroid, except for their bones, which were larger than normal. | |||
Experiments with the thin skull bones of mice have shown that the active thyroid hormone, T3, increases the | |||
formation of bone. To increase cellular respiration and carbon dioxide production, T3 increases the activity | |||
of the enzyme cytochrome oxidase, which uses copper as a co-factor. Increased thyroid activity increases the | |||
absorption of copper from foods.There is an inherited condition in humans, called osteopetrosis or marble | |||
bone disease, caused by lack of a carbonic anhydrase enzyme, which causes them to retain a very high level | |||
of carbon dioxide in their tissues. Using a chemical that inhibits carbonic anhydrase, such as the diuretic | |||
acetazolamide, a similar condition can be produced in animals. Acetazolamide inhibits the bone resorbing | |||
actions of parathyroid hormone, including lactic acid formation and the release of the lysosomal enzyme, | |||
beta-glucuronidase (Hall and Kenny, 1987). While lactic acidosis causes bone loss, acidosis caused by | |||
increased carbonic acid doesn't; low bicarbonate in the body fluids seems to remove carbonate from the bone | |||
(Bushinsky, et al., 1993), and also mineral phosphates (Bushinsky, et al., 2003). The parathyroid hormone, | |||
which removes calcium from bone, causes lactic acid to be formed by bone cells (Nijweide, et al., 1981; | |||
Lafeber, et al., 1986). Lactic acid produced by intense exercise causes calcium loss from bone (Ashizawa, et | |||
al., 1997), and sodium bicarbonate increases calcium retention by bone. Vitamin K2 (Yamaguchi, et al., 2003) | |||
blocks the removal of calcium from bone caused by parathyroid hormone and prostaglandin E2, by completely | |||
blocking their stimulation of lactic acid production by bone tissues. Aspirin, which, like vitamin K, | |||
supports cell respiration and inhibits lactic acid formation, also favors bone calcification. Vitamin K2 | |||
stimulates the formation of two important bone proteins, osteocalcin and osteonectin (Bunyaratavej, et al., | |||
2009), and reduces the activity of estrogen by oxidizing estradiol (Otsuka, et al, 2005).The formation of | |||
eggshell, which is mostly calcium carbonate, is analogous to the early stage of bone formation. In hot | |||
weather, when chickens pant and lower their carbon dioxide, they form thin shells. A sodium bicarbonate | |||
supplement improves the quality of the eggshell (Balnave and Muheereza, 1997; Makled and Charles, 1987). | |||
Chickens that habitually lay eggs with thinner shells have lower blood bicarbonate than those that lay thick | |||
shelled eggs (Wideman and Buss, 1985). One of the arguments for stopping the sale of DDT in the US was that | |||
it was threatening to cause extinction of various species of bird because it caused them to lay eggs with | |||
very weak shells. Several other synthetic estrogenic substances, ethynylestradiol, lindane, PCBs, cause | |||
eggshell thinning, partly by altering carbonic anhydrase activity (Holm, et al, 2006). Estrogen and | |||
serotonin activate carbonic anhydrase in some tissues, progesterone tends to inhibit it. DDE, a metabolite | |||
of DDT, reduces medullary bone formation in birds (Oestricher, et al., 1971) and bone mineral density in men | |||
(Glynn, et al., 2000). Among its estrogenic effects, DDE increases prolactin (Watson, et al., 2007); one | |||
form of DDT inhibits progesterone synthesis and increases estrogen (Wojtowics, et al., 2007)In youth, the | |||
mineralization of the collagen framework is slightly lower than in maturity, and the bones are more | |||
flexible. With aging, the mineralization increases progressively, and the proportion of collagen decreases | |||
slightly, and the bones become increasingly brittle. (Rogers, et al., 1952; Mbuyi-Muamba, et al., 1987). | |||
Collagen is a major part of the extracellular substance everywhere in the body, and its concentration | |||
increases with aging in the non-calcified tissues. There is considerable renewal and modification of | |||
collagen, as new molecules are formed and old molecules broken down, but its average structure changes with | |||
aging, becomes less soluble and more rigid, as the result of chemical cross-links formed between molecules. | |||
These cross-links are involved in regulating the differentiation of bone cells (Turecek, et al., 2008). | |||
Recently (August 2, 2011), Deasey et al., have published evidence showing that cross-linking is required for | |||
bone mineralization (2011).<strong>The outstanding physical-chemical property of bone is that it is a | |||
reservoir-buffer of carbon dioxide, able to bind huge amounts of the gas into its structure.</strong | |||
>Around 1950, Fritz Verzar began studying the changes of collagen that occur with aging, and his work led to | |||
the "collagen theory of aging." He showed that older, stiffer, less elastic tendons have a higher "melting" | |||
or contracting temperature than young tendons. (This effect is responsible for the curling of a piece of | |||
meat when it is frying.) Verzar and his colleagues investigated the effects of hormonal treatments on the | |||
aging of rat collagen, especially in their tail tendons. They found that estrogen treatment increased the | |||
stiffness and the melting temperature of collagenous tissues. While estrogen increased the cross-linking | |||
with aging, removing the pituitary gland was found to retard the aging. Later, the cross-linking enzymes | |||
transglutaminase and lysyl oxidase, which are induced by estrogen, were found to be a major factor in the | |||
cross-linking of collagen and other molecules.When estrogen was found to age the connective tissues, it was | |||
assumed that continual breeding during an animal's life-time, greatly increasing the total exposure of the | |||
tissues to estrogen, would increase the aged rigidity of the connective tissues, but these animals were | |||
found to have less rigid tissues. During pregnancy other hormones, especially progesterone, were also | |||
increased, and it was suggested that this reversed the effects of aging and estrogen. Since most people had | |||
believed that frequent pregnancies would cause a woman to age more rapidly, a large survey of records was | |||
done, to compare the longevity of women with the number of pregnancies. It was found, in the very extensive | |||
Hungarian records, that life-span was increased in proportion to the number of pregnancies.Despite these | |||
very interesting results in the 1950s and 1960s, the growing influence of the estrogen industry changed the | |||
direction of aging research, favoring the belief that decreasing estrogen accelerated the deterioration of | |||
tissues in aging, and the popularity of Denham Harman's "free radical theory of aging" led many people to | |||
assume that random reactions produced by lipid peroxidation were responsible for most of the cross-linking, | |||
and that theory was gradually replaced by the "glycation" theory of aging, in which sugar molecules break | |||
down and form the cross-links, by random, non-enzymic processes. Estrogen's role in aging was completely | |||
by-passed.The meat industry is interested in reducing the toughness of meat, by influencing the nature of | |||
the collagen in muscle. Castrated animals were found to produce meat that was tenderer than that of intact | |||
males. When castrated animals were treated with testosterone, the amount of collagen was increased, making | |||
the meat tougher. But when dihydrotestoserone, which can't be converted to estrogen was used, the meat | |||
didn't become tough. Treatment with estrogen produced the same increase of collagen as treatment with | |||
testosterone, showing that testosterone's effect was mainly the result of its conversion to estrogen | |||
(Miller, et al., 1990).In the 1960s and '70s the estrogen industry was looking for ways to build on the | |||
knowledge that in puberty estrogen is responsible for accelerating the calcification of the growth plate at | |||
the ends of the long bones, and to find a rationale for selling estrogen to all women concerned with the | |||
problems of aging. As bone metabolism was investigated, two kinds of cell were found to be active in | |||
constantly remodeling the bone structure: Osteoclasts (breaking it down), and osteoblasts (building new | |||
bone). Estrogen was found to slow the actions of the osteoclasts, so the idea that it would delay | |||
osteoporosis became the basis for a huge new marketing campaign. Slowing bone metabolism became the focus. | |||
Although estrogen was known to increase prolactin, and prolactin was known to accelerate bone loss, nearly | |||
all publications began to focus on substances in the blood or urine that corresponded to the rate of bone | |||
turnover, with the implication that increasing bone turnover would correspond to a net loss of bone.This was | |||
the context in which, during the 1980s, articles about thyroxine's role in causing osteoporosis began to | |||
appear. The thyroid hormone supports bone renewal, and increases indicators of bone breakdown in the blood | |||
and urine. If estrogen's use was to be justified by slowing bone turnover, then the effects of thyroid, | |||
accelerating bone turnover, should be interpreted as evidence of bone destruction.A basic problem with many | |||
of the publications on thyroid and bone loss was that they were talking about an unphysiological medical | |||
practice (prescribing the pre-hormone, thyroxine), which frequently failed to improve thyroid function, and | |||
could even make it worse, by lowering the amount of T3 in the tissues.Later, it was noticed that high TSH | |||
was associated with the signs of lower bone turnover. TSH rises when there is less thyroid hormone, but | |||
(after the recombinant TSH became available for medical use) a few publications argued that it was the TSH | |||
itself, rather than the absence of thyroid hormone, that was "protecting" the bones (lowering the evidence | |||
of bone turnover). The doctrine that had been developed to support estrogen therapy was now used to oppose | |||
thyroid therapy. Keeping the TSH high would slow bone turnover. Working in this cultural context, genetic | |||
engineers at Amgen identified a protein that inhibited the formation of osteoclast cells, and slowed bone | |||
metabolism. It was suggested that it was responsible for estrogen's suppression of the osteoclasts, and many | |||
publications appeared showing that it was increased by estrogen. It was named "osteoprotegerin," meaning | |||
"the bone protecting protein." Prolactin increases osteoprotegerin (OPG), reducing bone resorption just as | |||
estrogen does. Serotonin also increases OPG, and it turns out that OPG is elevated in all of the | |||
pathological conditions associated with high serotonin, including cancer, pulmonary artery hypertension, | |||
vascular calcification, and even bone loss.While Arthur Everitt, Verzar, and others were studying the | |||
effects of the rat's pituitary (and other glands) on collagen, W. D. Denckla investigated the effects of | |||
reproductive hormones and pituitary removal in a wide variety of animals, including fish and mollusks. He | |||
had noticed that reproduction in various species (e.g., salmon) was quickly followed by rapid aging and | |||
death. Removing the pituitary gland (or its equivalent) and providing thyroid hormone, he found that animals | |||
lacking the pituitary lived much longer than intact animals, and maintained a high metabolic rate. Making | |||
extracts of pituitary glands, he found a fraction (closely related to prolactin and growth hormone) that | |||
suppressed tissue oxygen consumption, and accelerated the degenerative changes of aging.Aging, estrogen, | |||
cortisol, and a variety of stresses, including radiation and lipid peroxidation, chemically alter collagen, | |||
producing cross-links that increase its rigidity, and affect the way it binds minerals. The cross-linking | |||
enzymes induced by estrogen are involved in the normal maturation of bone collagen, and at puberty when | |||
estrogen increases, bone growth is slowed, as the cross-linking and mineralization are accelerated. With | |||
aging and the accumulation of heavy metals and polyunsaturated fats, random oxidative processes increase the | |||
cross-linking. In bones, the relatively large masses of cartilage absorb oxygen and nutrients slowly, so | |||
internally the amount of oxygen is very limited, about 1/5 as much as at the surface, and this low oxygen | |||
tension is an important factor in regulating growth, differentiation, cross-linking, and calcification, | |||
maintaining bone integrity. But in blood vessels the connective tissues are abundantly supplied with oxygen | |||
and nutrients; this is normally a factor regulating the production of collagen and its cross-linking, and | |||
preventing calcification. When the factors promoting collagen synthesis and maturation are increased | |||
systemically, with aging and stress, the excess cross-linking slows the biological renewal process in bones, | |||
but in blood vessels the same processes creating excess cross-linking initiate a calcification process, | |||
involving the various factors that in youth are responsible for normal maturation of bone.Prolactin, like | |||
estrogen, interferes with thyroid function and oxygen consumption (Wade, et al., 1986; Strizhkov, 1991; | |||
Spatling, et al., 1982). Many years ago, repeated lactation was considered to cause osteoporosis and loss of | |||
teeth, and prolactin, which mobilizes calcium from bones for the production of milk, was recognized as an | |||
important factor in bone loss. Drugs that increase prolactin were found to cause osteoporosis. In the 40 | |||
years since the drug industry began its intense promotion of estrogen to prevent and treat osteoporosis, | |||
there has been very little attention to the fact that estrogen increases prolactin, which contributes to | |||
osteoporosis, but some people (e.g., Horner, 2009) have noticed that oral contraceptives and menopausal | |||
hormone treatments have damaged the bones of the inner ear, causing otosclerosis and impaired hearing, and | |||
have suggested that prolactin mediates the effect.A few years ago, the "serotonin reuptake inhibitor" | |||
antidepressants, already known to increase prolactin by increasing the effects of serotonin, were found to | |||
be causing osteoporosis after prolonged use. Estrogen increases serotonin, which besides promoting the | |||
secretion of prolactin, also stimulates the production of parathyroid hormone and cortisol, both of which | |||
remove calcium from bone, and contribute to the calcification of blood vessels. The association between | |||
weakened bones and hardened arteries is now widely recognized, but researchers are being careful to avoid | |||
investigating any mechanisms that could affect sales of important drug products, especially estrogen and | |||
antidepressants.Following the recognition that the SSRI drugs were causing osteoporosis, it was discovered | |||
that the serotonin produced in the intestine causes bone loss, and that inhibiting intestinal serotonin | |||
synthesis would stop bone loss and produce a bone building anabolic effect (Inose, et al., 2011). One group | |||
that had been concentrating on the interactions of genes commented that, recognizing the effects of | |||
intestinal serotonin, they had suddenly become aware of "whole organism physiology" (Karsenty and Gershon, | |||
2011).In previous newsletters I have talked about the ability of intestinal irritation and the associated | |||
increase of serotonin to cause headaches, asthma, coughing, heart and blood vessel disease, muscular | |||
dystrophy, flu-like symptoms, arthritis, inflammation of muscles and nerves, depression, and inflammatory | |||
brain diseases. With the new recognition that serotonin is a basic cause of osteoporosis, intestinal health | |||
becomes a major issue in aging research.The protein that inhibits intestinal formation of serotonin is the | |||
low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein. This seems likely to have something to do with the fact | |||
that "low" HDL is associated with better bones. A low level of LDL is associated with increased vertebral | |||
fractures (Kaji, et al., 2010).Cartilage synthesis and turnover are highest at night. It is inhibited by | |||
metabolic acidosis (increased lactic acid), but not by respiratory acidosis (CO2) (Bushinsky, 1995). Since | |||
most calcium is lost from bone during the night (Eastell, et al., 1992; even in children: DeSanto, et al., | |||
1988) in association with the nocturnal rise of the catabolic substances, such as free fatty acids, | |||
cortisol, prolactin, PTH, and adrenalin, things which minimize the nocturnal stress can decrease the bone | |||
turnover. These include calcium (Blumsohn, et al., 1994) and sugar. Catabolic substances and processes | |||
increase with aging, especially at night. Babies grow most during the night when bone turnover is high, and | |||
even a daytime nap accelerates collagen turnover (Lutchman, et al., 1998). Discussions about whether a | |||
certain person's osteoporosis is "menopausal osteoporosis" or "senile osteoporosis" have neglected the | |||
possibility that osteoporosis doesn't begin in either menopause or old age, but that it is the result of | |||
life-long developmental processes that interact with all the factors that are involved in aging. The fact | |||
that the collagen content of old bone is lower than in young bone (as a percentage of bone weight) shows | |||
that the problem in osteoporosis isn't a lack of calcification, it's a deficiency of tissue renewal, | |||
parallel to sarcopenia, the decrease of muscle mass with aging. Systemically decreased tissue renewal would | |||
account for the association of bone loss with other processes such as male baldness (Morton, et al., 2007) | |||
and Alzheimer's disease (Zhou, et al., 2011, Duthie, et al., 2011).A high level of respiratory energy | |||
production that characterizes young life is needed for tissue renewal. The accumulation of factors that | |||
impair mitochondrial respiration leads to increasing production of stress factors, that are needed for | |||
survival when the organism isn't able to simply produce energetic new tissue as needed. Continually | |||
resorting to these substances progressively reshapes the organism, but the investment in short-term | |||
survival, without eliminating the problematic factors, tends to exacerbate the basic energy problem. This | |||
seems to be the reason that Denckla's animals, deprived of their pituitary glands, but provided with thyroid | |||
hormone, lived so long: they weren't able to mobilize the multiple defenses that reduce the mitochondria's | |||
respiratory energy production. Several things that the geneticists would never be able to fit into their | |||
schemes of "bone regulatory molecules" such as OPG, growth hormone, parathyroid hormone, and estrogen, fit | |||
neatly with the idea that bone health is maintained by respiratory energy and tissue renewal, under the | |||
influence of thyroid hormone. For example, adrenaline, which is increased by stress, aging, and | |||
hypothyroidism (and in many cases by estrogen), causes bone loss. Even the bone loss caused by immobility | |||
can be blocked by an adrenaline blocker such as propranolol. (The stress of immobility also famously | |||
increases serotonin.) Adrenaline tends to decrease carbon dioxide and increase lactic acid, and it strongly | |||
increases parathyroid hormone (Ljunhgall S, et al., 1984). Calcium activates mitochondrial respiration, and | |||
lowers adrenaline (Luft, et al., 1988), parathyroid hormone (Ohgitani, et al., 1997), and prolactin (Kruse | |||
and Kracht, 1981). Copper, which is the co-factor for the cytochrome C oxidase enzyme, activated by thyroid, | |||
is essential for bone formation and maintenance, and is consistently deficient in osteoporosis. Thyroid | |||
hormone increases the body's ability to assimilate copper. Aspirin, which stimulates bone formation, has | |||
other thyroid-like actions, including activation of mitochondrial respiration and energy production, with an | |||
increase of cytochrome C oxidase (Cai, et al., 1996), and it lowers serotonin (Shen, et al., 2011). It also | |||
apparently protects against calcification of the soft tissues, (Vasudev, et al., 2000), though there has | |||
been surprisingly little investigation of that. "Aspirin can promote trabecular bone remodeling, improve | |||
three-dimensional structure of trabecular bone and increase bone density of cancellous in osteoporotic rats | |||
by stimulating bone formation. It may become a new drug for the treatment of osteoporosis" (Chen, et al., | |||
2011).A wide range of inflammatory mediators that accelerate inflammation and bone loss also inhibit thyroid | |||
function. People who ate more polyunsaturated fat, which inhibits thyroid and oxidative metabolism, were | |||
several times more likely to have osteoporotic fractures (that is, essentially spontaneous fractures) than | |||
people who ate the least (Martinez-Ramirez, et al., 2007). Arachidonic acid stimulates prolactin secretion, | |||
and prolactin acts on the thyroid gland to decrease its activity, and on other tissues to increase their | |||
glycolysis (with lactate production), while decreasing oxidative metabolism (Spatling, et al., 1982; | |||
Strizhkov, 1991). Living at high altitude, which strengthens bones, increases thyroid activity and decreases | |||
prolactin (Richalet, et al., 2010) and parathyroid hormone (Khan, et al., 1996). It lowers free fatty acids, | |||
which lower bone mass by reducing bone formation and increasing bone resorption (Chen, et al., 2010). In | |||
menopausal women, polyunsaturated fatty acids and even monounsaturated fats are associated with bone loss, | |||
fruit and vegetable consumption protects against bone loss (Macdonald, et al., 2004).While it's very | |||
interesting that the drug propranol which blocks adrenaline, and drugs that block serotonin formation, have | |||
bone protective and restorative effects, they also have undesirable side effects. Food choices that optimize | |||
oxidative metabolism are the safest, as well as the most economical, way to approach the problem of | |||
osteoporosis and other degenerative changes. A person can easily perceive changes in appetite, quality of | |||
sleep, changes in skin, hair, and mood, etc., but blood tests could be used to confirm that the right | |||
choices were being made. Tests for vitamin D, parathyroid hormone, free fatty acids, and CO2/bicarbonate, as | |||
well as the hormones, can be helpful, if a person isn't sure whether their diet, sunlight exposure, and | |||
thyroid supplementation is adequate. The popular medical understanding of the organism is based on a | |||
mechanistic view of causality, in which genes have a central role, causing things to develop and function in | |||
certain ways, and that hormones and drugs can cause genes to increase or decrease their activity. Genes that | |||
build bones can be activated by one substance, and genes that tear down bones can be inhibited by another | |||
substance. The "osteoprotegerin" story illustrates the problem with that kind of thinking. Vernadsky's | |||
description of an organism as a "whirlwind of atoms" is probably a better way to think of how "causality" | |||
works. The moving air in a whirlwind forms a self-intensifying system, with the motion reducing the | |||
pressure, causing more air to be drawn into the system. The atoms moving in coordination aren't acting as | |||
separate things, but as parts in a larger thing. The way in which increased metabolism in the bones acts | |||
favorably on the metabolism of kidneys, blood vessels, lungs, liver, digestive system, etc., which in turn | |||
favors the bones' renewal, is analogous to the tendency of a whirlwind to intensify as long as there is a | |||
source of energy. <strong>The intensity of oxidative metabolism is the basic factor that permits continuing | |||
coordination of activity, and the harmonious renewal of all the components of the organism.</strong> | |||
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</strong>Semenov VL.Cell Biochem Biophys. 2011 Sep;61(1):23-31. <strong>Aspirin attenuates pulmonary | |||
arterial hypertension in rats by reducing plasma 5-hydroxytryptamine levels.</strong> Shen L, Shen J, Pu | |||
J, He B. Arch Gynecol. 1982;231(4):263-7.<strong> | |||
Influence of prolactin on metabolism and energy production in perfused corpus luteum bearing bovine | |||
ovaries.</strong> Spatling L, Stahler E, Vilmar W, Ullrich J, Buchholz R.Probl Endokrinol (Mosk). 1991 | |||
Sep-Oct;37(5):54-8. <strong>[Metabolism of thyroid gland cells as affected by prolactin and | |||
emotional-physical stress].</strong> Strizhkov VV.J Biol Chem 282(35):25406-15, 2007.<strong> | |||
Ultrasound induces hypoxia-inducible factor-1 activation and inducible nitric-oxide synthase expression | |||
through the integrin/integrin-linked kinase/Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin pathway in | |||
osteoblasts.</strong> Tang CH, Lu DY, Tan TW, Fu WM, Yang RS.Calcif Tissue Int. 2008 May;82(5):392-400. | |||
<strong>Collagen cross-linking influences osteoblastic differentiation. </strong>Turecek C, Fratzl-Zelman N, | |||
Rumpler M, Buchinger B, Spitzer S, Zoehrer R, Durchschlag E, Klaushofer K, Paschalis EP, Varga F.Artif | |||
Organs. 2000 Feb;24(2):129-36.<strong> | |||
Synergistic effect of released aspirin/heparin for preventing bovine pericardial calcification.</strong> | |||
Vasudev SC, Chandy T, Sharma CP, Mohanty M, Umasankar PR.Am J Physiol. 1986 May;250(5 Pt 2):R845-50. <strong | |||
>Energy balance and brown adipose tissue thermogenesis during pregnancy in Syrian hamsters. | |||
</strong>Wade GN, Jennings G, Trayhurn P.Expert Opin Investig Drugs. 2005 Mar;14(3):251-64. <strong | |||
>Parathyroid hormone and leptin--new peptides, expanding clinical prospects.</strong> Whitfield JF. Leptin, | |||
a member of the cytokine superfamily has a PTH-like osteogenic activity and may even partly mediate PTH | |||
action. But leptin has two drawbacks that cloud its therapeutic future. First, apart from directly | |||
stimulating osteoblastic cells, it targets cells in the hypothalamic ventromedial nuclei and through them it | |||
reduces oestrogenic activity by promoting osteoblast-suppressing adrenergic activity. Second, it stimulates | |||
vascular and heart valve ossification, which leads to such events as heart failure and diabetic limb | |||
amputations.Poult Sci. 1985 May; 64(5):1015-9.<strong> | |||
Arterial blood gas, pH, and bicarbonate values in laying hens selected for thick or thin eggshell | |||
production.</strong> Wideman RF Jr, Buss EG.J Clin Invest. 1999 Oct; 104(7):895-901. <strong>Increased | |||
cortical bone mineral content but unchanged trabecular bone mineral density in female ERbeta(-/-) | |||
mice.</strong> Windahl SH, Vidal O, Andersson G, Gustafsson JA, Ohlsson C.J Bone Miner Res. 2001 | |||
Aug;16(8):1388-98. <strong>Female estrogen receptor beta-/- mice are partially protected against age-related | |||
trabecular bone loss. | |||
</strong>Windahl SH, Hollberg K, Vidal O, Gustafsson JA, Ohlsson C, Andersson G.J Physiol Pharmacol. 2007 | |||
Dec;58(4):873-85. <strong>DDT- and DDE-induced disruption of ovarian steroidogenesis in prepubertal porcine | |||
ovarian follicles: a possible interaction with the main steroidogenic enzymes and estrogen receptor | |||
beta. | |||
</strong>Wojtowicz AK, Kajta M, Gregoraszczuk EL.Steroids. 2007 Feb;72(2):124-34. <strong>Xenoestrogens are | |||
potent activators of nongenomic estrogenic responses.</strong> Watson CS, Bulayeva NN, Wozniak AL, Alyea | |||
RA.Mol Cell Biochem. 2003 Mar;245(1-2):115-20. <strong>Inhibitory effect of menaquinone-7 (vitamin K2) on | |||
the bone-resorbing factors-induced bone resorption in elderly female rat femoral tissues in | |||
vitro.</strong> Yamaguchi M, Uchiyama S, Tsukamoto Y.Eur J Endocrinol. 2011 Jun;164(6):1035-41. <strong | |||
>Response of biochemical markers of bone turnover to oral glucose load in diseases that affect bone | |||
metabolism. | |||
</strong>Yavropoulou MP, Tomos K, Tsekmekidou X, Anastasiou O, Zebekakis P, Karamouzis M, | |||
Gotzamani-Psarrakou A, Chassapopoulou E, Chalkia P, Yovos JG.Exp Clin Endocrinol. 1984 Dec;84(3):294-8. | |||
<strong>Hypercalcaemia and calcitonin inhibit prolactin secretion.</strong> Zofkova I, Nedvidkova J.J | |||
Alzheimers Dis. 2011;24(1):101-8. <strong>Association between bone mineral density and the risk of | |||
Alzheimer's disease.</strong> Zhou R, Deng J, Zhang M, Zhou HD, Wang YJ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2012. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Osteoporosis, harmful calcification, and nerve/muscle malfunctions</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Osteoporosis, harmful calcification, and nerve/muscle malfunctions | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
During pregnancy, a woman's ability to retain dietary calcium and iron increases, and the baby seems to be | |||
susceptible to overloading. A normal baby doesn't need dietary iron for several months, as it uses the iron | |||
stored in its tissue, and recently it has been reported that normal fetuses and babies may have calcified | |||
pituitary glands. Pituitary cell death is sometimes seen with the concretions. (Groisman, et al.) | |||
Presumably, the calcification is resorbed as the baby grows. This is reminiscent of the "age pigment" that | |||
can be found in newborns, representing fetal stress from hypoxia, since that too disappears shortly after | |||
birth. Iron overload, age pigment, and calcification of soft tissues are so commonly associated with old | |||
age, that it is important to recognize that the same cluster occurs at the other extreme of (young) age, and | |||
that respiratory limitations characterize both of these periods of life. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Calcium is probably the most popular element in physiological research, since it functions as a regulatory | |||
trigger in many cell processes, including cell stimulation and cell death. Its tendency to be deposited with | |||
iron in damaged tissue has often been mentioned. In hot weather, chickens pant to cool themselves, and this | |||
can lead to the production of thin egg shells. Carbonated water provides enough carbon dioxide to replace | |||
that lost in panting, and allows normal calcification of the shells. [Science 82, May, 1982] The deposition | |||
of calcium is the last phase of the "tertiary coat" of the egg, to which the oviduct glands successively add | |||
albumin, "egg membrane," and the shell, containing matrix proteins (including some albumin; Hincke, 1995) | |||
and calcium crystals. Albumin is the best understood of these layers, but it is still complex and | |||
mysterious; its unusual affinity for metal ions has invited comparisons with proteins of the immune system. | |||
It is known to be able to bind iron strongly, and this is considered to have an "immunological" function, | |||
preventing the invasion of organisms that depend on iron. Maria de Sousa ("Iron and the lymphomyeloid | |||
system: A growing knowledge," Iron in Immunity, Cancer and Inflammation, ed. by M. de Sousa and J. H. Brock, | |||
Wiley & Sons, 1989) has argued that the oxygen delivery system and the immune system evolved together, | |||
recycling iron in a tightly controlled system. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The role of macrophages in the massive turnover of hemoglobin, and as osteoclasts, gives us a perspective in | |||
which iron and calcium are handled in analogous ways. Mechnikov's view of the immune system, growing from | |||
his observations of the "phagocytes," similarly gave it a central role in the organism as a form-giving/ | |||
nutrition-related process. In a family with "marble-bone disease," or osteopetrosis, it was found that their | |||
red blood cells lacked one form of the carbonic anhydrase enzyme, and that as a result, their body fluids | |||
retained abnormally high concentrations of carbon dioxide. Until these people were studied, it had been | |||
assumed that an excess of carbon dioxide would have the opposite effect, dissolving bones and causing | |||
osteoporosis or osteopenia, instead of osteopetrosis. The thyroid hormone is responsible for the carbon | |||
dioxide produced in respiration. Chronic hypothyroidism causes osteopenia, and in this connection, it is | |||
significant that women (as a result of estrogen's effects on the thyroid) are much more likely than men to | |||
be hypothyroid, and that, relative to men, women in general are "osteopenic," that is, they have more | |||
delicate skeletons than men do. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In an experiment, rats were given a standard diet, to which had been added 1% Armour thyroid, that is, they | |||
were made extremely hyperthyroid. Since their diet was inadequate (later experiments showed that this amount | |||
of thyroid didn't cause growth retardation when liver was added to the diet) for their high metabolic rate, | |||
they died prematurely, in an apparently undernourished state, weighing much less than normal rats. Their | |||
bones, however, were larger and heavier than the bones of normal rats. A few incompetent medical "studies" | |||
have made people fear that "taking thyroid can cause osteoporosis." Recognizing that hypothyroid women are | |||
likely to have small bones and excessive cortisol production, the inadequate treatment of hypothyroidism | |||
with thyroxin (the thyroid-suppressive precursor material), is likely to be associated with relative | |||
osteoporosis, simply because it doesn't correct hypothyroidism. Similar misinterpretations have led people | |||
to see an association between "thyroid use" (generally thyroxin) and breast cancer--hypothyroid women are | |||
likely to have cancer, osteoporosis, obesity, etc., and are also likely to have been inadequately treated | |||
for hypothyroidism. T3, the active form of thyroid hormone, does contribute to bone formation. (For example, | |||
M. Alini, et al.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Around the same time (early 1940s) that the effects of thyroid on bone development were being demonstrated, | |||
progesterone was found to prevent age-related changes in bones, and "excessive" seeming doses of thyroid | |||
were found to prevent age-related joint diseases in rats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A logical course of events, building on these and subsequent discoveries, would have been to observe that | |||
the glucocorticoids cause a negative calcium balance, leading to osteoporosis, and that thyroid and | |||
progesterone oppose those hormones, protecting against osteoporosis. But the drug industry had discovered | |||
the profits in estrogen ("the female hormone") and the cortisone-class of drugs. Estrogen was promoted to | |||
prevent miscarriages, to stop girls (and boys) from growing too tall, to cure prostate and breast cancer, to | |||
remedy baldness, and 200 other absurdities. As all of those frauds gradually became untenable, even in the | |||
commercial medical culture, the estrogen industry began to concentrate on osteoporosis and femininity. Heart | |||
disease and Alzheimer's disease back those up. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"If estrogen causes arthritis, prescribe prednisone for the inflammation. If prednisone causes osteoporosis, | |||
increase the dose of estrogen to retard the bone-loss. People are tough, and physiological therapies aren't | |||
very profitable." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Fifteen years ago I noted in a newsletter that hip fractures most often occur in frail, underweight old | |||
women, and that heavier, more robust women seem to be able to bear more weight with less risk of fracture. | |||
Although I hadn't read it at the time, a 1980 article (Weiss, et al.) compared patients with a broken hip or | |||
arm with a control group made up of hospitalized orthopedic patients with problems other than hip or arm | |||
fractures. The fracture cases' weight averaged 19 pounds lighter than that of the other patients. They were | |||
more than 3.6 times as likely to be alcoholic or epileptic. It would be fair to describe them as a less | |||
robust group. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since the use of estrogen has become so common in the U.S., it is reasonable to ask whether the incidence of | |||
hip fractures in women over 70 has declined in recent decades. If estrogen protects against hip fractures, | |||
then we should see a large decrease in their incidence in the relevant population. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hip fractures, like cancer, strokes, and heart disease, are strongly associated with old age. Because of the | |||
baby-boom, 1945 to 1960, our population has a bulge, a disproportion in people between the ages of 35 and | |||
50, and those older. Increasingly, we will be exposed to publicity about the declining incidence of disease, | |||
fraudulently derived from the actually declining proportion of old people. For example, analyzing claims | |||
based on the pretense that the population bulge doesn't exist, I have seen great publicity given to studies | |||
that would imply that our life-expectancy is now 100 years, or more. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Comparing the number of hip fractures, per 1000 75 year old women, in 1996, with the rate in 1950, we would | |||
have a basis for judging whether estrogen is having the effect claimed for it. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The x-ray data seem to convince many people estrogen is improving bone health, by comparing measurements in | |||
the same person before and after treatment. Does estrogen cause water retention? Yes. Does tissue water | |||
content increase measured bone density? Yes. Are patients informed that their "bone scans" don't have a | |||
scientific basis? No. The calcification of soft tissues under the influence of estrogen must also be taken | |||
into account in interpreting x-ray evidence. (Hoshino, 1996) Granted that woman who are overweight have | |||
fewer hip fractures (and more cancer and diabetes), what factors are involved? Insulin is the main factor | |||
promoting fat storage, and it is anabolic for bone. (Rude and Singer, "Hormonal modifiers of mineral | |||
metabolism.") The greatest decrease in bone mass resulting from insulin deficiency was seen in white | |||
females, and after five years of insulin treatment, there was a lower incidence of decreased bone mass | |||
(Rosenbloom, et al., 1977). McNair, et al. (1978 and 1979) found that the loss of bone mass coincided with | |||
the onset of clinical diabetes. Since excess cortisol can cause both high blood sugar and bone loss, when | |||
diabetes is defined on the basis of high blood sugar, it will often involve high blood sugar caused by | |||
excess cortisol, and there will be calcium loss. Elsewhere, I have pointed out some of the similarities | |||
between menopause and Cushing's syndrome; a deficiency of thyroid and progesterone can account for many of | |||
these changes. Nencioni and Polvani have observed the onset of progesterone deficiency coinciding with bone | |||
loss, and have emphasized the importance of progesterone's antagonism to cortisol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Johnston (1979) found that progesterone (but not estrone, estradiol, testosterone, or androstenedione) was | |||
significantly lower in those losing bone mass most rapidly. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Around the age of 50, when bone loss is increasing, progesterone and thyroid are likely to be deficient, and | |||
cortisol and prolactin are likely to be increased. Prolactin contributes directly to bone loss, and is | |||
likely to be one of the factors that contributes to decreased progesterone production. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen tends to cause increased secretion of prolactin and the glucocorticoids, which cause bone loss, but | |||
it also promotes insulin secretion, which tends to prevent bone loss. All of these factors are associated | |||
with increased cancer risk. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Thyroid and progesterone, unlike estrogen, stimulate bone-building, and are associated with a decreased risk | |||
of cancer. It seems sensible to use thyroid and progesterone for their general anti-degenerative effects, | |||
protecting the bones, joints, brain, immune system, heart, blood vessels, breasts, etc. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But the issue of calcification/decalcification is so general, we mustn't lose interest just because the | |||
practical problem of osteoporosis is approaching solution. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For example, healthy high energy metabolism requires the exclusion of most calcium from cells, and when | |||
calcium enters the stimulated or deenergized cell, it is likely to trigger a series of reactions that lower | |||
energy production, interfering with oxidative metabolism. During aging, both calcium and iron tend to | |||
accumulate and they both seem to have an affinity for similar locations, and they both tend to displace | |||
copper. (Compare K. Sato, et al., on the calcification of copper-containing paints.) Elastin is a protein, | |||
the units of which are probably bound together by copper atoms. In old age, elastin is one of the first | |||
substances to calcify, for example in the elastic layers of arteries, causing them to lose elasticity, and | |||
to harden into almost bone-like tubes. In the heart and kidneys, the mitochondria (rich in copper-enzymes) | |||
are often the location showing the earliest calcification, for example when magnesium is deficient. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Obviously, certain proteins have higher than average affinity for copper, iron, and calcium. For example, | |||
egg-white's unusual behavior with copper can be seen if you make a meringue in a copper pan--the froth is | |||
unusually firm. My guess is that copper atoms bind the protein molecules into relatively elastic systems. In | |||
many systems, calcium forms the link between adhesive proteins. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In brain degeneration, the regions that sometimes accumulate aluminum, will accumulate other metals instead, | |||
if they predominate in the environment; calcium is found in this part of the brain in some of the Pacific | |||
regions studied by Gajdusek. Certain cells in the brain used to be called "metalophils," because they could | |||
be stained intensely with silver and other metals; I suppose these are part of the immune system, handling | |||
iron as described by Maria de Sousa. Macrophages have been proposed as an important factor in producing | |||
atherosclerotic plaques (Carpenter, et al.). There is evidence that they (and not smooth muscle cells) are | |||
the characteristic foam cells, and their conversion of polyunsaturated oils into age pigment accounts for | |||
the depletion of those fats in the plaques. The same evidence could be interpreted as a defensive reaction, | |||
binding iron and destroying unsaturated fatty acids, and by this detoxifying action, possibly protecting | |||
against calcification and destruction of elastin. (This isn't the first suggestion that atherosclerosis | |||
might represent a protective process; see S. M. Plotnikov, et al., 1994.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since carbon dioxide and bicarbonate are formed in the mitochondria, it is reasonable to suppose that the | |||
steady outward flow of the bicarbonate anion would facilitate the elimination of calcium from the | |||
mitochondria. Since damaged mitochondria are known to start the process of pathological calcification in the | |||
heart and kidneys, it probably occurs in other tissues that are respiratorily stressed. And if healthy | |||
respiration, producing carbon dioxide, is needed to keep calcium outside the cell, an efficient defense | |||
system could also facilitate the deposition of calcium in suitable places--depending on specific protein | |||
binding. The over-grown bones in the hyperthyroid rats and the women with osteopetrosis suggest that an | |||
abundance of carbon dioxide facilitates bone formation. Since no ordinary inorganic process of | |||
precipitation/crystallization has been identified that could account for this, we should consider the | |||
possibility that the protein matrix is regulated in a way that promotes (or resists) calcification. The | |||
affinity of carbon dioxide for the amine groups on proteins (as in the formation of carbamino hemoglobin, | |||
which changes the shape of the protein) could change the affinity of collagen or other proteins for calcium. | |||
Normally, ATP is considered to be the most important substance governing such changes of protein | |||
conformation or binding properties, but ordinarily, ATP and CO2 are closely associated, because both are | |||
produced in respiration. Gilbert Ling has suggested that hormones such as progesterone also act as cardinal | |||
adsorbants, regulating the affinity of proteins for salts and other molecules. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cells have many proteins with variable affinity for calcium; for example in muscle, a system called the | |||
endoplasmic reticulum, releases and then sequesters calcium to control contraction and relaxation. (This | |||
calcium-binding system is backed up by--and is spatially in close association with--that of the | |||
mitochondrion.) Ion-exchange resins can be chemically modified to change their affinity for specific ions, | |||
and molecules capable of reacting strongly with proteins can change the affinities of the proteins for | |||
minerals. What evidence is there that carbon dioxide could influence calcium binding? The earliest | |||
deposition of crystals on implanted material is calcium carbonate. (J. Vuola, et al, 1996.) In newly formed | |||
bone, the phosphate content is low, and increases with maturity. While mature bone has an apatite-like ratio | |||
of calcium and phosphate, newly calcified bone is very deficient in phosphate (according to Dallemagne, the | |||
initial calcium to phosphorus ratio is 1.29, and it increases to 2.20.) (G. Bourne, 1972; Dallemagne.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The carbonate content of bone is often ignored, but in newly formed bone, it is probably the pioneer. | |||
Normally, "nucleation" of crystals is thought of as a physical event in a supersaturated solution, but the | |||
chemical interaction between carbon dioxide and amino groups (amino acids, protein, or ammonia, for example) | |||
removes the carbon dioxide from solution, and the carbamino acid formed becomes a bound anion with which | |||
calcium can form a salt. With normal physiological buffering, the divalent calcium (Ca2+) should form a link | |||
between the monovalent carbamino acid and another anion. Linking with carbonate (CO32-), one valence would | |||
be free to continue the salt-chain. This sort of chemistry is compatible with the known conditions of bone | |||
formation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Klein, et al. (1996), think of uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation in terms of "subtle thermogenesis," which | |||
isn't demonstrated in their experiment, but their experiment actually suggests that stimulated production of | |||
carbon dioxide is the factor that stimulates calcification. Their experiment seems to be the in vitro | |||
equivalent of the various observations mentioned above. DHEA, which powerfully stimulates bone formation, is | |||
(like thyroid and progesterone) thermogenic, but in these cases, the relevant event is probably the | |||
stimulation of respiration, not the heat production. In pigs (Landrace strain) susceptible to malignant | |||
hyperthermia, there is slow removal of calcium from the contractile apparatus of their muscles. Recent | |||
evidence shows that an extramitochondrial NADH-oxidase is functioning. This indicates that carbon dioxide | |||
production is limited. I think this is responsible for the cells' sluggishness in expelling calcium. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Stress-susceptible pigs show abnormalities of muscle metabolism (e.g., high lactate formation) that are | |||
consistent with hypothyroidism. (T. E. Nelson, et al., "Porcine malignant hyperthermia: Observations on the | |||
occurrence of pale, soft, exudative musculature among susceptible pigs," Am. J. Vet. Res. 35, 347-350, 1974; | |||
M. D. Judge, et al., "Adrenal and thyroid function in stress-susceptible pigs (Sus domesticus)," Am. J. | |||
Physiol. 214(1), 146-151, 1968.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Malignant hyperthermia during surgery is usually blamed on genetic susceptibility and sensitivity to | |||
anesthetics. (R. D. Wilson, et al., "Malignant hyperpyrexia with anesthesia," JAMA 202, 183-186, 1967; B.A | |||
Britt and W. Kalow, "Malignant hyperthermia: aetiology unknown," Canad. Anaesth. Soc. J. 17, 316-330, 1970.) | |||
Hypertonicity of muscles, various degrees of myopathy and rigidity, and uncoupling of oxidative | |||
phosphorylation occur in these people, as in pigs. Lactic acidosis suggests that mitochondrial respiration | |||
is defective in the people, as in the pigs. Besides the sensitivity to anesthetics, the muscles of these | |||
people are abnormally sensitive to caffeine and elevated extracellular potassium. During surgery, artificial | |||
ventilation, combined with stress, toxic anesthetics, and any extramitochondrial oxidation that might be | |||
occurring (such as NADH-oxidase, which produces no CO2), make relative hyperventilation a plausible | |||
explanation for the development of hyperthermia. Hyperventilation can cause muscle contraction. Panting | |||
causes a tendency for fingers and toes to cramp. Free intracellular calcium is the trigger for muscle | |||
contraction (and magnesium is an important factor in relaxation.) Capillary tone, similarly, is increased by | |||
hyperventilation, and relaxed by carbon dioxide. The muscle-relaxing effect of carbon dioxide shows that the | |||
binding of intracellular calcium is promoted by carbon dioxide, as well as by ATP. The binding of calcium in | |||
a way that makes it unable to interfere with cellular metabolism is, in a sense, a variant of simple | |||
extrusion of calcium, and the binding of calcium to extracellular materials. A relaxed muscle and a strong | |||
bone are characterized by bound calcium. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Activation of the sympathetic nervous system promotes hyperventilation. This means that hypothyroidism, with | |||
high adrenalin (resulting from a tendency toward hypoglycemia because of inefficient use of glucose and | |||
oxygen), predisposes to hyperventilation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Muscle stiffness, muscle soreness and weakness, and osteoporosis all seem to be consequences of inadequate | |||
respiration, allowing lactic acid to be produced instead of carbon dioxide. Insomnia, hyperactivity, | |||
anxiety, and many chronic brain conditions also show evidence of defective respiration, for example, either | |||
slow consumption of glucose or the formation of lactic acid, both of which are common consequences of low | |||
thyroid function. Several studies (e.g., Jacono and Robertson, 1987) suggest that abnormal calcium | |||
regulation is involved in epilepsy. The combination of supplements of thyroid (emphasizing T3), magnesium, | |||
progesterone and pregnenolone can usually restore normal respiration, and it seems clear that this should | |||
normalize calcium metabolism, decreasing the calcification of soft tissues, increasing the calcification of | |||
bones, and improving the efficiency of muscles and nerves. (Magnesium, like carbonate, is a component of | |||
newly formed bone.) The avoidance of polyunsaturated vegetable oils is important for protecting respiration; | |||
some of the prostaglandins they produce have been implicated in osteoporosis, but more generally, they | |||
antagonize thyroid function and they can interfere with calcium control. The presence of the "Mead acid" | |||
(the omega-9 unsaturated fat our enzymes synthesize) in cartilage suggests a new line of investigation | |||
regarding the bone-toxicity of the polyunsaturated dietary oils. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
G. R. Sauer, et al., "A facilitating role for carbonic anhydrase activity in matrix vesicle mineralization," | |||
Bone and Mineral 26(1), 69-79, 1994. T. R. Anellet, "Effects of medium acidification by alteration of carbon | |||
dioxide or bicarbonate concentration on the resorptive action of rat osteoclasts," J. Bone and Mineral Res. | |||
9(3), 375-379, 1994. (...resorption was almost abolished in the presence of 2.5% CO2 at pH 7.61 but | |||
increased in a stepwise manner up to 1.3 pits per osteoclast when dentin slices were cultured with 10% CO2 | |||
at pH 6.97.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
D. A. Bushinsky, et al., "Acidosis and bone," Min. & Electrolyte Metab. 20(1-2), 40-52, 1994. ("During | |||
acute respiratory acidosis there is no measurable influx of protons in bone and during chronic studies there | |||
is no measurable calcium efflux.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
D. A. Bushinsky, et al., "Decreased bone carbonate content in response to metabolic but not respiratory | |||
acidosis," Amer. J. Physiol. 265(4, part 2), F530-F536, 1993. ("...elevated pCO2 doesn't allow bone | |||
carbonate dissolution despite reduced pH.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. Vuola, et al., "Bone marrow induced osteogenesis in hydroxyapatite and calcium carbonate implants," | |||
Biomaterials 17(18), 1761-1766, 1996. A. H. Knell, I. J. Fairchild, and K. Swett, Palaios 8, 512-525, 1993. | |||
(Late proterozoic ocean was supersaturated with calcium carbonate.) F. Marin, et al., "Sudden appearance of | |||
calcified skeletons at precambrian-cambrian transition," Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S. 93(4), 1554-1559, 1996. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. J. Dallemagne, Acta Physiother. Rheumatol. Belg.3, 77, 1947; Nature (London) 161, 115, 1948; Annu. Rev. | |||
Physiol. 12, 101, 1950; J. Physiol. (Paris) 43, 425, 1951. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
G. H. Bourne, ed., The Biochemistry and Physiology of Bone; Physiology and Pathology, Academic Press, 1972. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. A. Schlechte, et al., "Bone density in amenorrheic women with and without hyperprolactinemia," J. Clin. | |||
Endocrinol. & Metabolism 56, 1120, 1983. (Evidence for a direct effect of prolactin on bone.) P. S. | |||
Dannies, "Control of prolactin production by estrogen," chapter 9, p. 289, in Biochemical Actions of | |||
Hormones XII, Academic Press, 1985. J.-J. Body, et al., "Calcitonin deficiency in primary hypothyroidism," | |||
J. Clin. Endocrinology and Metabolism 62(4), 700, 1986. ("We conclude that the process that causes | |||
hypothyroidism in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease can also cause marked CT deficiency.") T. | |||
Nencioni and F. Polvani, "Rationale for the use of calcitonin in the prevention of post-menopausal | |||
osteoporosis," in Calcitonin, A. Pecile, editor, Elsevier Science Publ., 1985. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
C. C. Johnston, et al., "Age-related bone loss," pages 91-100 in U. S. Barrel, editor, Osteoporosis II, | |||
Grune and Stratton, N. Y., 1979. E. I. Barengolts, et al., "Progesterone antagonist RU 486 has bone-sparing | |||
effects in ovariectomized rats," Bone 17(1), 21-25, 1995. "...progesterone prevents ovariectomy-induced bone | |||
loss." M. Kasra and M. D. Grynpas, "The effects of androgens on the mechanical properties of primnate bone," | |||
Bone 17(3), 265-270, 1995. D. J. Rickard, et al., "Importance of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3 and the | |||
nonadherent cells of marrow for osteoblast differentiation from rat marrow stromal cells," Bone 16(6), | |||
671-678, 1995. ("...growth could be stimulated by...1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3, but not dexamethasone, 17 | |||
beta-estradiol, or retinoic acid...." D-3 and glucocorticoids "may regulate osteogenesis from the bone | |||
marrow but a similar role for estrogen is not supported.") P. W. Stacpoole, "Lactic acidosis and other | |||
mitochondrial disorders," Metabolism 46(3), 306-321, 1997. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
L. M. Banks, et al., "Effect of degenerative spinal and aortic calcification on bone density measurements in | |||
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Investigation 24(12), 813-817, 1994. ("Women with spinal degenerative calcification had higher spine bone | |||
density when measured by dual photon absorptionmetry compared to those without calcification." "Women with | |||
aortic calcification had significantly lower quantitative computer tomography and proximal femur bone | |||
density compared to those without calcification." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
S. E. Wendelaar Bonga and G. Flik, "Prolactin and calcium metabolism in a teleost fish, Sarotherodon | |||
mossambicus," Gen. Compar. Endocrinol. 46, 21-26, 1982. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
U.S. Barzel, "The skeleton as an ion exchange system: Implications for the role of acid-base imbalance in | |||
the genesis of osteoporosis," J. of Bone and Mineral Res. 10(10), 1431-1436, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
P. Schneider and C. Reiners, Letter, JAMA 277(1), 23, Jan. 1, 1997. Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry for | |||
bone density can lead to false conclusions about bone mineral content, because of alterations in tissue fat | |||
or water content. "The influence of fat distribution on bone mass measurements with DEXA can be of | |||
considerable magnitude and ranges up to 10% error per 2 cm of fat." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. Pearson, et al, Osteoporosis 5, 174-184, 1995 J. Dequeker, et al, "Dual X-ray | |||
absorptiometry--cross-calibration and normative reference ranges for the spine," Bone 17(3), 247-254, 1995 | |||
("...there is no uniformity in reporting results and in presenting reference data." "It is...crucially | |||
important to select appropriate reference data in clinical and epidemiological studies.") T.M. Hangartner | |||
and C. C. Johnston, "Influence of fat on bone measurements with dual-energy absorptionmetry," Bone Miner 9, | |||
71-81, 1990. R. Valkema, et al., "Limited precision of lumbar spine dual photon absorptiometry by variations | |||
in the soft-tissue background," J. Nucl. Med. 31, 1774-1781, 1990. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. Silberberg and R. Silberberg, Arch. Path. 31(1), 85-92, 1941. (Progesterone counteracts aging of bone in | |||
guinea pig.) M. Silberberg and R. Silberberg, Growth 4(3), 1305-14, 1940. (Decreased severity and incidence | |||
of old-age changes in the joints of normal mice.) G. Coryn, "Recherche experimentale sur l'influence des | |||
glands endocrines sur l'histologie du cartilage de conjugaison," Annales d'anatomie pathol. 16, 27, 1939. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
O. Rahn, "Protozoa need carbon dioxide for growth," Growth 5, 197-199, 1941. "On page 113 of this volume, | |||
the statement of Valley and Rettger that all bacteria need carbon dioxide for growth had been shown to apply | |||
to young as well as old cells." "...it is possible...to remove it as rapidly as it is produced, and under | |||
these circumstances, bacteria cannot multiply." K. L. H. Carpenter, et al., "Production of ceroid and | |||
oxidised lipids by macrophages in vitro," Lipofuscin--1987: State of the Art, I. Zs.-Nagy, editor, pp. | |||
245-268, 1988. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A. Schlemmer, et al., "Posture, age, menopause, and osteopenia do not influence the circadian variation in | |||
the urinary excretion of pyridinium crosslinks," J. Bone Miner. Res. 9(12), 1883-1888, 1994. N. S. Weiss, et | |||
al., "Decreased risk of fractures of the hip and lower forearm with postmenopausal use of estrogen,:" N. | |||
Engl. J. Med. 303, 1195-1198, 1980. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
S. M. Plotnikov, et al., "Anxiety, atherogenesis, and antioxidant protection: Clinico-pathogenetic | |||
relationships," Bull. Exp. Biol. & Medicine 117(2), 221, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
G. M. Groisman, et al., "Calcified concretions in the anterior pituitary gland of the fetus and the newborn: | |||
A light and electron microscopic study," Human Pathology 27(11), 1139-1143, 1996. (...calcified concretions | |||
represent a normal finding in the anterior pituitary gland of fetuses and young infants.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
K. S. G. Jie. "Vitamin K status and bone mass in women with and without aortic atherosclerosis: A | |||
population-based study," Calc. Tiss. Intern. 59(5), 352-356, 1996. ("The finding that in atherosclerotic | |||
women vitamin K status is associated with bone mass supports our hypothesis that vitamin K status affects | |||
the mineralization processes in both bone and in atherosclerotic plaques." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
B. Y. Klein, et al., "Cell-mediated mineralization in culture at low temperature associated with subtle | |||
thermogenic response," J. of Cellular Biochemistry 63(2), 229-238, 1996. "...cell-mediated mineralization is | |||
preceded by characteristics of anaerobic and low efficiency energy metabolism." "Modulation of mitochondrial | |||
membrane potential and energy metabolism could be linked to regulation of mineralization by the uncoupling | |||
of oxidative phosphorylation. This uncoupling should be associated with thermogenesis in cells that induce | |||
mineralization." C. R. Heath, B.S.C. Leadbeater, and M. E. Callow, "The control of calcification of | |||
antifouling paints in hard waters using a phosphonate inhibitor," Biofouling 9(4), 317-325, 1996. ("All | |||
paints contained cuprous oxide....) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
C. D. Yee, et al., "The relationship of nutritional copper to the development of postmenopausal osteoporosis | |||
in rats," Biol. Trace Element Res. 48(1), 1-11, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
H Hoshino, et al., "The influence of aortic calcification on spinal bone mineral density in vitro," Calc. | |||
Tiss. Intern 59(1), 21-23, 1996. ("...changes over time in a patient could falsely elevate values.") E. | |||
Toussirot, et , "Giant calcification in soft tissue after shoulder corticosteroid injection, J. of | |||
Rheumatology 23(1), 181-182, 1996, "Such periarticular calcifications are rarely observed and generally | |||
after triamcinolone hexacetonide injection." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. Alini, et al., "In serum-free culture thyroid hormones can induce full expression of chondrocyte | |||
hypertrophy leading to matrix calcification," J. of Bone and Mineral Res. 11(1), 105-113, 1996. ("...we | |||
compared the capacity of T3 with T4 to stimulate expression of the hypertrophic phenotype and matrix | |||
calcification in three . . . prehypertrophic chondrocyte subpopulations." "...T3 was at least 50-fold more | |||
potent than T4. The effects of T3 were most pronounced with the most immature cells." "...matrix | |||
calcification, measured by the incorporation of Ca45(2+) into the cell layer, always occurred earlier in | |||
cells cultured with T3 compared with T4." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. T. Hincke, "Ovalbumin is a component of the chicken eggshell matrix," Connective Tissue Research 31(3), | |||
227-233, 1995. (Immunochemically demonstrated in the mammillary bodies of decalcified shell. "These results | |||
indicate that ovalbumin is present during the initial phase of shell formation and becomes incorporated into | |||
the protein matrix of the mammillary bodies.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A. L. Boskey, et al., "Persistence of complexed acidic phospholipids in rapidly mineralizing tissues is due | |||
to affinity for mineral and resistance to hydrolytic attack: In vitro data," Calc. Tiss. Intern. 58(1), | |||
45-51, 1996. (Complexed acidic phospholipids may persist in the growth plate and facilitate initial mineral | |||
deposition.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A.L. Boskey, et al., "Viable cells are a requirement for in vitro cartilage calcification," Calc. Tiss. | |||
Intern. 58(3), 177-185, 1996. (Challenges dogma that chondrocyte death must precede calcification in the | |||
growth plate.) K. Sekino, et , role of coccoliths in the utilization of inorganic carbon by a marine | |||
unicellular coccolithophorid, Plant and Cell Physiol 37(2), 123-127, 1996. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Y. Seyama, et al., "Effect of vitamin K2 on experimental calcinosis induced by vitamin D2 in rat soft | |||
tissue," Intern. J. for Vitamin and Nutr. Res. 66(1), 36-38, 1996. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
R. Danielsen, et, "Predominance of aortic calcification as an atherosclerotic manifestation in women: The | |||
Reykjavik study," J. of Clin. Epidemiology 49(3), 383-387, 1996. (...a potential relation to pulse pressure; | |||
associated with blood sugar, use of antidiabetic drugs, serum cholesterol, smoking; much more frequent in | |||
women.) F. Etcharry, et al., Fahr's disease and mitochondrial myopathy," Revue Neurologique 151(12), | |||
731-733, 1995. (Calcification of the basal ganglia, Fahr's disease, associated with mitochondrial myopathy.) | |||
J. J. Jacono and J. M. Robertson, "The effects of estrogen, progesterone, and ionized calcium on seizures | |||
during the menstrual cycle of epileptic women," Epilepsia 28(5), 571-577, 1987. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. E. Sojka and C. M. Weaver, "Magnesium supplementation and osteoporosis," Nutrition Reviews 53(3), 71-74, | |||
1995. ("...magnesium therapy appears to have prevented fractures and resulted in a significant increase in | |||
bone density.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
R. Eastell, "Management of corticosteroid-induced osteoporosis," J. Internal Medicine 237(5), 439-447, 1995. | |||
"Corticosteroid therapy results in osteoporosis." "The most important mechanism for the bone loss is a | |||
decrease in osteoblastic activity." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J. P. Bonjour and R. Rizzoli, "Inadequate protein intake and osteoporosis: Possible involvement of the IGF | |||
system,:" Nutritional Aspects of Osteoporosis '84, Challenges of Mod. Med. 7, 399-406, 1995. H. Pedersen, et | |||
al, "Skin thickness in patients with osteoporosis..." Skin Pharmacology 8(4), 207-210, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
K. E. Schaefer, et al., "Phasic changes in bone CO2 fractions, calcium, and phosphorus during chronic | |||
hypercapnia," J. Applied Physiol. 48(5), 802-811, 1980. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
F. C. Driessens, "Probable phase composition of the mineral in bone," Z. Naturforsch (C) 35(5-6), 357-362, | |||
1980. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
G. R. Sauer, et al., "A facilitative role for carbonic anhydrase activity in matrix vesicle mineralization," | |||
Bone Miner. 26(1), 69-71, 1994, E. Reichart, et al., "CO2 storage in various organs during chronic | |||
experimental hypercapnia," Bull. Eur. Physiopathol. Respir. 12(1), 19-32, 1976. ("During a four week | |||
hypercapnia, this CO2 increase is very inmportant in bone and brain compared with that of other organs.... | |||
...the bone CO2 content is still increasing after four weeks.") H. Nitta, et al., "Effects of hot | |||
environments and carbonated drinking water on bone characteristics of eight-week-old broiler chicks," Poult. | |||
Sci. 65(3), 469-473, 1986. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
W. G. Bottje and P. C. Harrison, "Effect of carbonated water on growth performance of cockerels subjected to | |||
constant and cyclic heat stress termperatures," Poult. Sci. 64(7), 1285-92, 1985. P. Quint, et al., | |||
"Characteristic molar ratios of magnesium, carbon dioxide, calcium and phosphorus in the mineralizing | |||
fracture callus and predentine," Calcif. Tissue Int.32(3), 257-261, 1980. ("It was found that the Mg and | |||
CO2-contents are high in relation to Ca and P values during the prestages and early stages of | |||
mineralization.") M. F. Gulyi, "Role of carbonic acid and ammonium nitrogen in regulation of metabolism and | |||
physiological function in heterotrophic organisms," Ukr. Biokhim. Zh. 52(2), 141-145, 1980. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
K. E. Schaefer, et al., "Effect of intermittent exposure to 3% CO2 on respiration, acid-base balance, and | |||
calcium-phosphorus metabolism," Undersea Biomed. Res. 6 Suppl, S115-34, 1979. ("The known renal response to | |||
hypercapnia, consisting of an increased excretion of titratable acidity, ammonia, and hydrogen ion | |||
excretion, occurred but was interrupted after the first day....") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
U. F. Rasmussen, et al., "Characterization of mitochondria from pig muscle: | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Higher activity of exo-NADH-oxidase in animals suffering from malignant hyperthermia," Biochem. J. 315(Pt. | |||
2), 659-663, 1996. R. K. Rude and F. R. Singer, "Hormone modifiers of mineral metabolism," in Disorders of | |||
Mineral Metabolism, vol. II: Calcium Physiology, Ed. by F. Bronner and J. W. Coburn, Academic Press, 1982. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<strong>Pathological Science & General Electric:Threatening the paradigm</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Everything in biology depends on the internal order of cells, and on the interactions of each cell with its | |||
surroundings. All of these orderly interactions involve contacts between biological molecules and water. The | |||
forces regulating interactions on that scale must be understood before life can be understood, but the | |||
nature of the forces at these interfaces has been controversial for 100 years. In 1953, physicist Irving | |||
Langmuir gave a talk at the General Electric laboratory about what he called "pathological science." That | |||
talk is still resonating in the scientific culture, and it is used to reinforce attitudes similar to those | |||
held by Langmuir, i.e., the dominant scientific paradigm of the 20th century, and to justify certain | |||
institutions that regulate innovation. For Langmuir, there was a clearly defined "scientific method," and he | |||
said some people were led away from the proper method by wishful thinking to interpret ambiguous results as | |||
confirmations of their hypothesis. He listed 6 symptoms of pathological science: 1) An effect produced by a | |||
barely detectable cause, and 2) the effect is barely detectable, or many measurements are needed because of | |||
the very low statistical significance of the results, 3) claims of great accuracy, 4) they involve fantastic | |||
theories contrary to experience, 5) criticisms are met by <em>ad hoc</em> excuses, and 6) the ratio of | |||
supporters to critics approaches 50%, then fades toward zero. He failed to mention these features in any | |||
research that supported his view of things, and called an idea pathological when people continued to work on | |||
it despite disapproval by the recognized experts. He didn't mention the Nobel prizes that were given for the | |||
worm theory of cancer or for treating psychological problems with lobotomies, and he didn't mention that | |||
there were organized campaigns against the publication of disapproved ideas.The dominant view in biology, | |||
which is analogous to Langmuir's view in physics, is that all decisive cellular processes involve the direct | |||
mechanical contact of one molecule with another, the activation of a lock (an enzyme or receptor) by a key | |||
that has the right shape, or the adhesion of a molecule to another substance according to its chemical | |||
composition. An alternative view, now clearly supported by the evidence, is that there are forces that | |||
aren't merely between molecular surfaces, but rather that the local conditions at the surfaces of proteins | |||
and other molecules, and the properties of the solvent water, are modified by the surrounding conditions. It | |||
is this alternative view that is now making progress in understanding disease and health, regeneration and | |||
degeneration. But to judge the new work, it's important to know the nature of the opposition.Thomas Edison, | |||
who was adept at publicizing himself as the inventor of ideas he had bought or stolen, founded General | |||
Electric. Attempting to eliminate Nikola Tesla's system of alternating current, since Edison was invested in | |||
direct current systems, Edison's GE tried to convince the public that direct current was safer, by using | |||
alternating current to electrocute an elephant, and by promoting its use in the electric chair. GE | |||
eventually gave up the direct current technology for electrifying cities, and they refined the electric | |||
light bulb and were fairly successful in controlling, practically monopolizing, that market, and in | |||
shortening the life of incandescent bulbs. Carbon filament bulbs made around 1900 often lasted decades; I | |||
had one that kept working until it was broken during a move in 1960. Light bulbs made in England 65 years | |||
ago, and in the Soviet Union, and bulbs currently made in China, had a life expectancy five times as long as | |||
the bulbs made in the US since GE learned how to carefully control the rate at which the tungsten filament | |||
deteriorates. Irving Langmuir was their leading light bulb scientist. In his 1932 Nobel lecture, he | |||
tediously argued that molecules of gas can form only one layer on a surface such as a filament. About 17 | |||
years earlier, Michael Polanyi had demonstrated that molecules can be adsorbed in multilayers, but his | |||
evidence was dismissed because, according to the understanding of industrial experts such as Langmuir, and | |||
the leading scientific authorities, Einstein, Nernst, and Haber, it was impossible. They were committed to | |||
an explanatory system that didn't allow events such as those Polanyi described.Although Polanyi knew that | |||
his adsorption isotherm was more realistic than Langmuir's (he had demonstrated many cases that Langmuir's | |||
didn't describe correctly), and also easier to understand, he taught Langmuir's isotherm to his students, | |||
because he knew that they would be required to know it to pass their examinations. He knew he had risked his | |||
career by his earlier exposition of his ideas, and he was unwilling to endanger his students' careers by | |||
involving them in the controversy.From 1920 to 1926, before the advent in 1927 of "quantum physics" (with | |||
its still-argued features of delocalized electrons, molecular orbitals, resonance, non-locality, | |||
incommensurability, indeterminism), Polanyi had turned his attention from the physics of adsorption to | |||
chemical structure, and his group was the first to show that cellulose was made up of long molecules, | |||
polymers, rather than of just associated clusters. That idea didn't catch on, so he turned to the behavior | |||
of crystals and metals. He found that crystals were much weaker than they should be, according to the | |||
strength of the bonds between their atoms, and showed that this was because of defects, and that during | |||
repeated stresses, they became weaker, as energy migrated through relatively long distances in the | |||
substance, to concentrate the defects. The idea of lattice defects was acceptable at that time, but | |||
long-range mobility of bond energy was no more acceptable then than it had been when J.C. Bose described | |||
metal fatigue, decades earlier. Polanyi also showed that the strength and rigidity of a crystal were altered | |||
when the crystal was immersed in water. Again, such an influence of a surface on the over-all physical | |||
properties of a solid substance had no noticeable effect on the scientific culture, although his results | |||
were published in the major journals. To adjust one's interpretive system at that time to rationalize | |||
Polanyi's results would have required discarding the basic assumptions that were behind Einstein's | |||
explanation of the photoelectric effect, and maybe even his theory of Brownian motion. However, by 2011, | |||
fewer people have invested their personal development in those ideas of short-range electrical binding | |||
forces that prevailed early in the 20th century, and now, for example, the evidence of "delocalized holes in | |||
DNA" can be discussed more openly. Eventually, science textbooks may be rewritten to show a steady | |||
progression of understanding from Bose, though Polanyi, Perutz, Szent-Gyorgyi, Ling, and Damadian (inventor | |||
of the MRI, holder of the patents infringed by GE, non-winner of the Nobel prize). In 1933 J.D. Bernal had | |||
proposed a structural model of water that contained a considerable amount of order (Bernal and Fowler, 1933) | |||
but by the 1950s the idea of spontaneous ordering in water was out of style, and he worked out a more random | |||
structure. Max Perutz, continuing the study of hemoglobin he had begun with Bernal, became concerned with | |||
long range forces acting through water: "The nature of the forces which keep particles parallel and | |||
equidistant across such great thicknesses of water is not yet clear." Normal wet crystals of methemoglobin | |||
contain regular layers of water 15 Angstroms thick. He suggested that a laminated structure of the water | |||
could plausibly explain his measurements. Comparing the protein crystal to montmorillonite particles, which | |||
incorporate several layers of water, each 3 Angstroms thick, each layer of water in the protein crystal | |||
would be 4 Angstroms thick, since swelling proceeds in discrete steps of that thickness. 52.4% of the volume | |||
of Perutz's normal, stable, wet protein crystals consisted of liquid. Part of the water is a fixed | |||
monolayer, but the rest is apparently in the form of mobile, interactive, multilayers. By 1952, Perutz had | |||
decided that long range forces weren't involved in hemoglobin crystallization, but he didn't comment on the | |||
long range ordering of clays, tobacco mosaic viruses, and other particles and gels. In 2005, an interlaminar | |||
distance of 17.9 Angstroms, or six layers of water, still seems to be stable in hydrated montmorillonite | |||
(Odriozola & Aguilar, 2005). Clay continues to be studied in relation to nuclear waste disposal, so the | |||
effects of surfaces on water's properties haven't been entirely excluded from science. The interfacial water | |||
in clay has special catalytic properties that make it interesting to many researchers (Anderson, | |||
1970)Bernal's and Perutz' conformity in the 1950s rejection of long range forces and an ordered structure of | |||
water represented the dominant ideas in physics and physical chemistry, but many people (with very little | |||
financial or institutional support) were continuing to study the structure of water, both in the bulk phase | |||
and near surfaces, as in cells. Philippa Wiggins, Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, Carlton Hazlewood, Freeman Cope, and | |||
Ray Damadian were among the most active proponents of the importance of structured water in living cells. | |||
Walter Drost-Hansen showed that water near surfaces (vicinal water) is several percent less dense, and has a | |||
greater heat capacity, than bulk water, and that bulk water undergoes transitions at certain temperatures | |||
that alter its effects on enzyme reactions.The question regarding the nature of the forces at surfaces or | |||
interfaces affects how we think about everything, from life to nuclear energy. The political and economic | |||
implications of "non-local energy" (which is most obvious at surfaces) have at times led to organized | |||
campaigns to discourage research in those areas. When Alexandre Rothen found (beginning in 1946) that | |||
enzymes and antibodies had non-local effects, several prestigious publications claimed to show how he must | |||
have been mistaken<strong>: </strong>The<strong> </strong>films<strong> </strong>he used must have been | |||
porous, despite his demonstrations of their continuity. The methods he developed at Rockefeller Institute | |||
quickly became standard for accurately measuring very thin films. In the early 1970s, a GE employee, Ivar | |||
Giaever, visited Rothen's lab to learn his methods. Shortly after his visit, he demonstrated his "new | |||
method" to the press. I saw an article about it in Science News, and wrote them a short letter, pointing out | |||
that the method had been developed and used by Rothen much earlier<strong>;</strong> they printed my note, | |||
which could be seen as a criticism of the author of the news article. About a week later, I got a letter | |||
from Rothen, thanking me for writing to the magazine; he said they had refused to publish his own letter | |||
explaining the situation, including his interactions with Giaever during the visit. I assume that the | |||
magazine felt some kind of pressure to protect Giaever and GE from an authoritative accusation of scientific | |||
dishonesty.In 1968 when I began studying biology at the University of Oregon, the professor of microscopy, | |||
Andrew Bajer, posted a display of dozens of micrographs, with explanatory captions, along the halls near the | |||
entrance of one of the science buildings. The one that interested me most showed orderly rows of regularly | |||
formed objects on a smooth surface. The caption described it as clusters of sodium atoms, deposited from | |||
vapor, on a film of a polymer (formvar, I think), under which was a quartz crystal. The caption noted that | |||
the sodium atoms had condensed in a pattern representing the crystal structure of the underlying quartz. | |||
Although Rothen's work involved proteins deposited from solution, rather than sodium atoms deposited from | |||
vapor, Bajer's image illustrated visually the projection of the forces of crystal structure through an | |||
amorphous film. This seemed to be a graphic representation of Polanyi's adsorption potential, a force acting | |||
on atoms in the space near a surface, as opposed to Langmuir's local atomic force that didn't reach beyond | |||
the first layer of atoms. The long range order in this case arranged atoms geometrically, while Rothen's | |||
preparations showed a "projected" specificity, but of a more complex sort. Just a few months later, someone | |||
who knew of Stephen Carter's demonstration that fibroblasts will migrate on a glass slide coated with a gold | |||
film, toward areas of greater thickness of the metal, did a similar experiment, but with a formvar film | |||
between the gold and the cells. The cells still migrated up the gradient, toward the area of thicker gold | |||
under the film. The reaction to that publication was the same as the reaction to Rothen's work 20 years | |||
before, the formvar films contained holes, and the cells were reaching through the film to touch the metal | |||
surface, sort of like kids peeking around a blindfold when they aren't supposed to be watching. I didn't | |||
understand how the holes would explain anything, even if there were holes and if the cells had put out many | |||
long filopodia to reach through the film, but in fact making a formvar film is a very standardized | |||
technique. They can be made "holey," or like a very open net, or they can be made solid, just by choosing | |||
the concentration of the polymer used. The difference is very clear, under an electron microscope, but the | |||
professors needed an excuse for dismissing something they didn't want to understand. Further work was | |||
discouraged by their ridicule.In Russia, GE had very little influence on the acceptability of ideas in | |||
science, and Boris Deryagin continued (from the 1930s until 1990) to study the properties of water near | |||
surfaces. In 1987 his group demonstrated that cells can clear particles from a space around themselves, | |||
extending more than a cell's diameter away. This distance is similar to the cell free zone in flowing blood | |||
adjacent to the walls of arterioles, which is probably the result of multiple interacting forces. At | |||
present, processes such as cell adhesion of leukocytes and stem cells (and tumor cells) to the blood vessel | |||
wall and movement through the blood vessel into the tissues (diapedesis) is explained in terms of adhesion | |||
molecules, disregarding the plausible effects of long range attractive or repulsive forces. Clumping or | |||
sludging of red blood cells occurs when the organism is failing to adapt to stress, and could be reasonably | |||
explained by a failure of protective repulsive fields. These fields are developed and maintained by | |||
metabolism, primarily oxidative energy metabolism, and are modified by endogenous regulatory substances and | |||
external conditions, including electromagnetic and electrical fields. 100 years ago, Albert Einstein was a | |||
major influence in popularizing the "only local" dogma of atomic interactions. (His work led directly to | |||
"quantum physics," but he never accepted its irrational implications.<strong><sup>(1)</sup></strong> I don't | |||
think he ever considered that the assumptions in his [atomic-quantized] theory of the photoelectric effect | |||
were the problem.) One charged atom is completely neutralized by its association with an oppositely charged | |||
atom, and the force is described by the inverse square law, that the force decreases with the square of the | |||
distance between point charges, meaning that the force is very strong at very small distances. However, a | |||
physical<strong><em>surface</em></strong>, a plane where one substance ends and another begins, follows | |||
different rules. Different substances have different electron affinities, creating a phase boundary | |||
potential, a charged layer at the interface. (Electrical double layers at interfaces are important in | |||
semiconductors and electrodes, but biologists have carefully avoided discussing them, except in the very | |||
narrow context of electrodes.) The electrically active surface of a substance, even though it's made of | |||
atoms and electrons, projects its electrical field in proportion to its area. This principle is as old as | |||
Coulomb's law, but the habit of thinking of electrical charge on the atomic scale seems to make people | |||
forget it. It's exactly the sort of space-filling field that Polanyi's adsorption isotherm describes. It's | |||
also involved in crystal strength and elasticity as studied by Polanyi, in piezoelectricity, and in | |||
generation of semiconduction in amorphous materials, as used in Stan Ovshinsky's processes.Long range | |||
structural and electronic interactions produce "antenna" effects, which are sensitive to very weak fields, | |||
whether they originate inside or outside of the organism. Magnetobiology is often treated as a | |||
pseudo-science or pathological science, because "real science" considers heating and chemical bond reactions | |||
to be the only possible effects of low energy fields or radiation. Solco Tromp, beginning in the 1930s, | |||
showed that cells behave like liquid crystals, and that liquid crystals can respond to very low electrical | |||
and magnetic fields.If the adsorption potential structures the water in its region of space, this | |||
interfacial water is now a new <em>phase</em>, with different physical properties, including new catalytic | |||
properties, such as those recognized by the clay investigators (which increased its ability to dissolve the | |||
clay minerals).Several versions of Langmuir's Pathological Science talk have been published, some of them | |||
adding new examples, including "polywater." Langmuir died in 1957, and the first example of polywater was | |||
observed by N.N. Fedyakin was observed in 1961. When finely drawn quartz or Pyrex glass capillary tubes | |||
(with inside diameter of up to a tenth of a millimeter) are suspended in a container with the air pressure | |||
reduced, above a container of distilled water, so that they are exposed to pure water vapor at room | |||
temperature, after a period of an hour or more (sometimes days or weeks were required) a small drop of | |||
liquid condenses inside some (a small percentage) of the capillary tubes. Above some of the original drops, | |||
a second drop sometimes appeared, that would enlarge as the first drop shrank. This separation of water into | |||
two fractions was itself anomalous, and the upper drop was found to be denser than normal water. Many people | |||
began studying its properties. Fedyakin found that its thermal expansion was greater, and its vapor pressure | |||
lower, than ordinary water. Others found that it had a higher refractive index, viscosity, and surface | |||
tension, as well as greater density, than ordinary water. Birefringence (the splitting of a beam of light | |||
into two rays when it passes through an ordered material) was observed in the anomalous water, and this | |||
usually indicates the presence of a polymer (Fedyakin, et al., 1965; Willis et al., 1969; Lippincott, et | |||
al., 1969) or crystallinity. The water associated with clay is also birefringent (Derjaguin and | |||
Greene-Kelly, 1964), and its properties are different when the clay absorbs it from the vapor phase or from | |||
liquid water.Hysteresis is a lag in the behavior of a system, resulting when the internal state of the | |||
system is altered by an action, so that it responds differently to a repetition of that action; it's the | |||
memory of a system that exists only when the system has internal structure. For example, a gas has | |||
relatively little hysteresis. Perfect elasticity is one extreme of an ordered solid, but most solids have | |||
some hysteresis, in which the deformed material fails to spring back immediately. Hysteresis of adsorption | |||
can be seen at the edges of a drop of water on a tilted surface, with a steeper contact angle on the newer | |||
contact at the lower edge, showing a reluctance of the water to wet a new surface, a lower contact angle | |||
where the drop is pulling away from the upper surface, a reluctance to break the contact. The same is seen | |||
at the edges of an evaporating-shrinking drop, or a growing drop. Everyone perceives this memory function of | |||
water.Boris Deryagin studied both the elasticity and the hysteresis of water near surfaces, and both | |||
approaches showed that it contained internal structure. Many dogmatic professors denied that water could | |||
show elasticity or "memory," because of their interpretive system/mental rigidity. When Fedyakin got the | |||
help of Deryagin's lab in analyzing the anomalous material, many different methods of purifying the glass | |||
and the water and the vessel were tried, and its properties were analyzed in many different ways. When | |||
Deryagin first described the material at a conference in Europe, there was great interest, and eventually | |||
hundreds of people began investigating it. A British laboratory was the first to get a sample of Deryagin's | |||
material in 1966, and their tests confirmed Deryagin's. The US Bureau of Standards, having the best | |||
analytical instruments in the world (including a microscope spectrometer), studied it carefully. They | |||
(Lippincott, Stromberg, Grant, & Cessac, 1969) found that its bonds were stronger than those in ordinary | |||
water, and they compared its absorption spectrum (by computer) with those of 100,000 known substances, and | |||
found that it corresponded with nothing previously known. It didn't have the absorption band of normal | |||
water. When it evaporated, it left no visible residue, and it turned into ordinary water when heated. They | |||
concluded that the physical structure that would best fit its absorption spectrum was a polymerized form of | |||
water, so they called it "polywater." Later, Lippincott and others (Page, et al., 1970; Petsko, 1970) did | |||
proton magnetic resonance analyses that showed a difference of polywater from normal water in the hydrogen | |||
bonding, a "deshielding" of the protons, meaning that the electrons were arranged differently in the | |||
molecules.In 1969 there were many threats to the dominant paradigm, and many people were demanding a change | |||
in the government's funding priorities. The public excitement about polywater following the many | |||
confirmations of its existence was disturbing to the defenders of the paradigm. Philip Abelson, the chief | |||
editor of Science magazine, used the magazine to further his political beliefs. Denis Rousseau, a young | |||
researcher at Bell Labs (who now writes about pathological science), published a series of articles in | |||
Science describing his tests of polywater. He played tennis until his tee-shirt was soaked with sweat, then | |||
extracted and concentrated the sweat into a small gummy pellet. He reported that the infrared spectrum of | |||
the sweat concentrate (largely sodium lactate) was very similar to that of polywater. One of the techniques | |||
he used to identify impurities (electron spectroscopy) requires a high vacuum, so there couldn't be any | |||
normal water present. The water associated with ionic impurities is driven off at low temperatures compared | |||
to the temperature needed to decompose the anomalous water.Although Rousseau's "explanation" was ludicrous, | |||
it was just the thing the professors needed to prevent further challenges to their paradigm. Although | |||
Deryagin published more evidence of the purity of the anomalous water in 1972, by 1973 the mass media, | |||
including Science magazine, were saying that polywater didn't exist, and that Deryagin had admitted that he | |||
was mistaken. But polywater was Lippincott's term, and what Deryagin said was that silica was the only | |||
impurity that could be identified in the anomalous material. There are many antecedents to anomalous water | |||
in the literature. In the 1920s, W.A. Patrick of Johns Hopkins and J. L. Shereshefsky at Howard university | |||
investigated the properties of water in fine capillary tubes and found that the vapor pressure wasn't the | |||
same as that of normal water. (This is what would have been expected, if Polanyi's adsorption isotherm had | |||
been accepted.) The density of water in clay has been found to be slightly less than normal. This water | |||
bound to clay requires a high temperature to eliminate, similar to the decomposition temperature of | |||
polywater. The catalytic properties of interfacial water in clay are recognized, causing it to solublize | |||
components of the clay. So it's hard to imagine that there wouldn't be some silica in the material formed in | |||
quartz or glass capillary tubes.<strong>The only thing pathological about the polywater episode was the | |||
extreme effort that was made to stigmatize a whole category of research, to restore faith in the old | |||
doctrine that insisted there are no long range ordering processes anywhere in the universe.</strong> The | |||
successful campaign against polywater strengthened the mainstream denial of the evidence of ordering in | |||
interfacial and intracellular water, kept the doctrine of the lipid bilayer cell membrane alive, and up | |||
until the present has prevented the proper use of MRI scans in medical diagnosis.In 1946, while the | |||
government was studying the way nuclear fallout was influenced by the weather, a group at GE, led by | |||
Langmuir, began experimenting with weather control by means of "cloud seeding." Langmuir observed that the | |||
energy in a cloud system was greater than that in an atomic bomb, and that by seeding clouds in Europe, | |||
disastrous weather effects could be created in the Soviet Union. The GE group convinced the Pentagon to | |||
become involved in weather control. (The physicist Ross Gunn was transferred directly from work on the | |||
atomic bomb to direct the cloud seeding project.) In one of Langmuir's seeding experiments, he claimed that | |||
he had changed the direction of a hurricane moving toward the U.S. When a young researcher pointed out that | |||
the weather service had predicted exactly that change of direction, based on the temperatures of ocean | |||
currents, Langmuir became angry, and told the man that he wasn't going to explain it to him, because he was | |||
too stupid to understand. Langmuir's attitude toward science was exactly what GE wanted; his career and | |||
reputation were part of the corporation's public relations and business plan. Science was whatever GE | |||
thought was good for their business. That science was pathological, sometimes by Langmuir's own defining | |||
features, most of the time by the effects it has had on society. The Manhattan Project was central to GE's | |||
business plan, and when the bomb project was completed GE and the Atomic Energy Commission found that the | |||
same subsidies could be used to develop nuclear generators of electricity. Following Edison's pioneering | |||
work with x-rays, x-ray imaging machines had become very profitable for GE. It was important to assure the | |||
public that medical, industrial, and military radiation was well understood, well controlled, safe, and | |||
essential for the general welfare. In their view, if every woman could have access to GE's x-ray mammograms, | |||
for example, almost all breast cancers could be cured. The radiation exposure from living near a GE nuclear | |||
power generator is infinitesimal compared to living in Denver or flying in an airplane. (There is some | |||
discussion of these issues in my January, 2011 newsletter, "Radiation and growth.") Public relations | |||
involves everything from "basic research" to television advertising.If nuclear energy is as safe as the | |||
industry and governments say it is, the reactors should be located in the centers of large cities, because | |||
transmitting electric power long distances is presently wasting 50% of the power (Hirose Takashi, The | |||
Nuclear Disaster that could destroy Japan...and the world, 2011). Admiral Rickover, influential advocate of | |||
nuclear power, said "...every time you produce radiation, [a] horrible force [is unleashed,] and I think | |||
there the human race is going to wreck itself. [We must] outlaw nuclear reactors" (January, 1982 | |||
congressional testimony) Helen Caldicott says Fukushima is many times worse than Chernobyl. The radioactive | |||
cesium in German mushrooms and truffles hasn't decreased 25 years after Chernobyl, and the German government | |||
is spending increasing amounts to compensate hunters for the wild boars (who eat truffles) that must be | |||
disposed of as radioactive waste.<strong><sup>(2)</sup></strong>General Electric sent its condolences to the | |||
people of Japan, and said the reactors of that design had functioned well for 40 years; they didn't mention | |||
that Unit I at Fukushima had been scheduled to be shut down on March 26, 2011, the end of its 40 year life | |||
expectancy. In late March, as the accident continued, Tepco applied for a permit to build two new reactors | |||
at the Fukushima site. In the US, the government continues its loan guarantee policy to subsidize new | |||
reactor construction. After many years of working with his metalized slides, Alexandre Rothen found that | |||
their activity, the strength of their long-range influence, varied with a 24 hour cycle, and that their | |||
activity could also be destroyed or restored by putting them in a magnetic field, parallel or perpendicular | |||
to the surface. Around the same time, a Russian biochemist, Simon Shnoll, noticed that there were cyclic | |||
changes in well defined enzymic reactions. Like Rothen, Shnoll did experiments that showed that the earth's | |||
motion (relative to the stars) affected measurements in the laboratory, even measurements of alpha particles | |||
produced by nuclear fission. Organized matter, whether it's cellular or in the crystalline solid state, is | |||
susceptible to surrounding conditions.In 1971 or '72 I learned of H.C. Dudley's idea of a "neutrino sea," | |||
that he suggested might be equivalent to the "luminiferous ether" that had previously been used to explain | |||
light and electromagnetism. I wrote to him, asking if he thought neutrinos could be involved in biological | |||
ordering processes by resonating with matter under some circumstances. He had been developing a theory, in | |||
which atomic nuclei might interact with a neutrino "ether," in ways that could affect the decay rate of the | |||
unstable isotopes, and so it didn't seem unreasonable to him that biological structures might also interact | |||
with neutrinos. In October, 1972, he published a purely theoretical article in which he explained that | |||
nuclear reactors might under some conditions become dangerously unstable. I had earlier seen a newspaper | |||
article about an experiment by a physicist, J.L. Anderson, in which radioactive carbon-14 didn't follow the | |||
normal rules of random decay, when the isotope was incorporated into an oil, which was spread in a monolayer | |||
on a metal surface. By chance, Anderson's experimental article was published simultaneously with Dudley's | |||
theoretical article, though neither one knew of the other's work. Nearly all physicists said his results | |||
weren't possible, because the small forces involved in adsorbing an oil to a metal surface were | |||
infinitesimal compared to the force needed to cause nuclear reactions. Over the next few years, Dudley and | |||
others did some experiments that appeared to confirm Anderson's results, showing that the rate of nuclear | |||
reactions can be modified by mild changes in the physical state of the unstable elements.Anderson's and | |||
Dudley's work didn't get much attention from the public, so there was no need for the defenders of the | |||
dominant paradigm to attack it. There was no financial support for continuing their research.Behind the | |||
industries' assurances that "low level" radiation is safe, whether it's ionizing radiation, microwave or | |||
broadcast frequency electromagnetic radiation, is their reductionist approach to physics, chemistry, and | |||
biology. Those doctrines no longer have the prestige that they once did, but their pathological, | |||
authoritarian "science" culture is being sustained by the influence of corporations on mass culture.With the | |||
institutions of research and education controlled by pharmaceutical, military and industrial interests for | |||
their own benefit, fundamental progress in knowledge is a threat to the system. NOTES1. From Einstein's 1926 | |||
letter to Max Born: "Quantum mechanics is very worthy of regard. But an inner voice tells me that this is | |||
not yet the right track. The theory yields much, but it hardly brings us closer to the Old One's secrets. I, | |||
in any case, am convinced the He does not play dice." Quoted in P. Busch and G. Jaeger, "Unsharp quantum | |||
reality," 4 May 2010.2. None of the major institutions in the US are providing basic information about | |||
protection from Fukushima's radioactive fallout. Eating foods produced before the arrival of the radioactive | |||
rain, feeding old foods to chickens and milk animals, and keeping your metabolic rate high, are the main | |||
defenses. Eventually, fertilizing crops with mined minerals, and enriching the atmosphere with carbon from | |||
coal will dilute the radioactive isotopes from the nuclear accidents.<h3>REFERENCES</h3>DM Anderson, <strong | |||
>Role of interfacial water and water in thin films in the origin of life,</strong> | |||
<a rel="nofollow" href="http://history.nasa.gov/CP-2156/ch1.4.htm" target="_blank" | |||
>http://history.nasa.gov/CP-2156/ch1.4.htm</a>DM Anderson and AR Tice, 1970, <strong>Low-temperature phases | |||
of interfacial water in clay-water systems, | |||
</strong>Crrel Research Reports, Army Dept, US, Res Rpt 290. "The low temperature exotherms do not depend | |||
critically upon water content, but clearly they are related to clay mineral and exchangeable cation type. | |||
The evolution of heat in this temperature range probably corresponds to a phase change in the interfacial | |||
water.")J. Physical Cehmistry 76(4), 1976, <strong>"Non-Poisson distributions observed during counting of | |||
certain carbon-14 labeled (sub) monolayers,"</strong> Anderson JL.Biophys. Chem. 113 (2005): 245-253, | |||
<strong>Structural and kinetic effects of mobile phone microwaves on acetylcholinesterase activity,</strong> | |||
Barteri M, Pala A, Rotella S.J. Chem. Phys. 1, 515), 1933, Bernal JD & Fowler RH.J Cell Biol 1964, | |||
127(1):117-128. <strong>Electric field-directed fibroblast locomotion involves cell surface molecular | |||
reorganization and is calcium independent,</strong> Brown MJ and Loew LM.Nature 1965 208(5016):1183-7, | |||
<strong>Principles of cell motility: the direction of cell movement and cancer invasion, | |||
</strong>Carter SB.Nature 1967 213: 256-60, <strong>Haptotaxis and mechanism of cell motility,</strong> | |||
Carter SB.Popular Science, June 1973, <strong>How you can grow your own polywater,</strong> PA Christian and | |||
LH Berka<strong>:</strong> "Some experts claim this rare substance doesn't exist. Yet here's how you can | |||
harvest enough of it for own experiments." Pyrex thermometer tubing from a mail-order scientific supply | |||
store ....Biophysical Journal 9 (1969),303-319, <strong>Nuclear magnetic resonance evidence using D2O for | |||
structured water in muscle and brain, | |||
</strong>Cope FW.Langmuir 3(5): 607-612 (1987), <strong>Structure of water in thin layers,</strong> Deryagin | |||
BV, Churaev NV.Langmuir 3(5): 601-606 (1987), <strong>Modern state of the investigation of long-range | |||
surface forces, | |||
</strong>Deryagin BV.Trans. Faraday Soc. 60 (1964: 449-455, <strong>Birefringence of thin liquid | |||
films,</strong> Derjaguin BV and Greene-Kelly R.Pure & Appl. Chem. 61(11) (1989): 1955-1958, <strong | |||
>Influence of surface forces on the formation of structural peculiarities of the boundary layers of liquids | |||
and boundary phases, | |||
</strong>Derjaguin BV. "The surface forces acting beyond the range of boundary monolayers, are able to | |||
change the concentration of dissolved ions and molecules.Trans. Faraday Soc. 60, 449 (1964), <strong | |||
>Reversible and irreversible modification of the properties of liquids under the influence of a lyophilic | |||
surface</strong>, Derjaguin BV and Green-Kelly R. "Evidence is given of the reversible character of the | |||
modification of the properties of liquids under the action of surface forces." (Lyophopic substrate, a few | |||
molecules thick.) "In other cases, e.g. water-glass, water-quartz, fatty acids-metals, the substrate alters | |||
the structure of the liquid and the properties depending on it to a depth of many tens or hundreds of | |||
monolayers." (Lyophilic substrate). (the electroviscous effect, proportional to the square of the | |||
zeta-potential).Fed Proc Transl Suppl. 1965 24(3):431-3, <strong>Effect of constant magnetic field on motor | |||
activity of birds, | |||
</strong>El'darov AL & Kholodov YA.Physics A: Statistical and Theoretical Physics 172 (1-2), | |||
161-173.<strong> The structure and properties of vicinal water: Lessons from statistical geometry,</strong> | |||
Etzler FM, Ross RF, Halcomb RA, (3% greater density, 25% greater heat capacity.Dokl. Akad. Nauk. SSSR 165 | |||
(1965): 878, Fedyakin N.N.FEBS Lett. 367 (1995): 53-55, <strong>Changes in the state of water, induced by | |||
radiofrequency electromagnetic fields,</strong> Fesenko EE and Gluvstein A.Ya.D. Green-Kelly, B.V. | |||
Derjaguin, <strong>Research in Surface Forces vol. 2,</strong> p. 117, Consultants Bureau, NY (1966). | |||
(Birefringence of water near surfaces, in layers up to 200 A thick. Also birefringence of the boundary | |||
layers of benzene derivatives.)Nature (submitted 1969) Hazlewood CF, Nichols BL, Chamberlain NF.Science 164 | |||
(1969), p. 1482, Lippincott ER.Med. Hypotheses 66 (2006) 518-526, <strong>Cell hydration as the primary | |||
factor in carcinogenesis: A unifying concept,</strong> McIntyre GI.Med. Hypothese 69 (2007): 1127-1130, | |||
<strong>Increased cell hydration promotes both tumor growth and metastasis: A biochemical mechanism | |||
concsistent with genetic signatures,</strong> McIntyre, GI.J Chem Phys 123, 174708, 2005,<strong> | |||
Stability of Ca-montmorillonite hydrates: A computer simulation study, | |||
</strong>Odriozola G & JF Aguilar JF.Tranropesactions of the Faraday Society, vol. XLII B, 1946, <strong | |||
>"The composition and swelling properties of haemoglobin crystals,"</strong> Perutz M.Science 171(3967), | |||
170-172, <strong>"Polywater" and sweat: Similarities between the infrared spectra,</strong> D.L. | |||
Rousseau,Biochim Biophys Acta 1975; 403(1):89-97, <strong>Synchronous reversible alterations in enzymatic | |||
activity (conformational fluctuations) in actomyosin and creatine kinase preparations,</strong>Shnoll | |||
SE, Chetverikova EP.Szent-Gyorgyi, A., 1957, <strong>Bioenergetics,</strong> Academic Press, Inc. New | |||
York.Prog. Polym. Sci. 20 (1995): 1121-1163, <strong>High and low-density water in gels,</strong> Wiggins | |||
PM.Nature 222, 159-161, 1969, <strong>"Anomalous" Water</strong>, Willis E, GK Rennia, C Smart BA Pethica. | |||
</p> | |||
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<strong><span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: large" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal">Phosphate, activation, and aging</span></span></span | |||
></span></strong> | |||
</h2> | |||
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<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Recent publications are showing that excess phosphate can increase inflammation, tissue atrophy, | |||
calcification of blood vessels, cancer, dementia, and, in general, the processes of aging. This | |||
is especially important, because of the increasing use of phosphates as food additives.</span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Previously, the complications of chronic kidney disease, with increased serum phosphate, | |||
were considered to be specific for that condition, but the discovery of a | |||
phosphate-regulating gene named klotho (after one of the Fates in Greek mythology) has | |||
caused a lot of rethinking of the biological role of phosphate. In the 19th century, | |||
phosphorus was commonly called brain food, and since about 1970, its involvement in cell | |||
regulation has become a focus of reductionist thinking. ATP, adenosine triphosphate, is | |||
seen as the energy source that drives cell movement as well as the "pumps" that maintain | |||
the living state, and as the source of the cyclic AMP that is a general activator of | |||
cells, and as the donor of the phosphate group that activates a great number of proteins | |||
in the "phosphorylation cascade." When tissues calcified in the process of aging, | |||
calcium was blamed (ignoring the existence of calcium phosphate crystals in the | |||
tissues), and low calcium diets were recommended. Recently, when calcium supplements | |||
haven't produced the intended effects, calcium was blamed, disregarding the other | |||
materials present in the supplements, such as citrate, phosphate, orotate, aspartate, | |||
and lactate.</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>I have a different perspective on the "phosphorylation cascade," and on the other functions of | |||
phosphate in cells, based largely on my view of the role of water in cell physiology. In the | |||
popular view, a stimulus causes a change of shape in a receptor protein, causing it to become an | |||
active enzyme, catalyzing the transfer of a phosphate group from ATP to another protein, causing | |||
it to change shape and become activated, and to transfer phosphate groups to other molecules, or | |||
to remove phosphates from active enzymes, in chain reactions. This is standard biochemistry, | |||
that can be done in a test tube.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Starting around 1970, when the involvement of phosphorylation in the activation of enzymes in | |||
glycogen breakdown was already well known, people began noticing that the glycogen phosphorylase | |||
enzyme became active immediately when the muscle cell contracted, and that phosphorylation | |||
followed the activation. Phosphorylation was involved in activation of the enzyme, but if | |||
something else first activated the enzyme (by changing its shape), the addition of the phosphate | |||
group couldn't be considered as causal, in the usual reductionist sense. It was one participant | |||
in a complex causal process. I saw this as a possible example of the effect of changing water | |||
structure on protein structure and function. This view of water questions the relevance of test | |||
tube biochemistry.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Enzymes are known which suddenly become inactive when the temperature is lowered beyond a certain | |||
point. This is because soluble proteins arrange their shape so that their hydrophobic regions, | |||
the parts with fat-like side-chains on the amino acids, are inside, with the parts of the chain | |||
with water-soluble amino acids arranged to be on the outside, in contact with the water. The | |||
"wetness" of water, its activity that tends to exclude the oily parts of the protein molecule, | |||
decreases as the temperature decreases, and some proteins are destabilized when the relatively | |||
hydrophobic group is no longer repelled by the surrounding cooler water. </span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>In the living cell, the water is all within a very short distance of a surface of fats or | |||
fat-like proteins. In a series of experiments, starting in the 1960s, Walter | |||
Drost-Hansen showed that, regardless of the nature of the material, the water near a | |||
surface is structurally modified, becoming less dense, more voluminous. This water is | |||
more "lipophilic," adapting itself to the presence of fatty material, as if it were | |||
colder. This change in the water's properties also affects the solubility of ions, | |||
increasing the solubility of potassium, decreasing that of sodium, magnesium, and | |||
calcium (Wiggins, 1973).</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>When a muscle contracts, its volume momentarily decreases (Abbott and Baskin, 1962). Under | |||
extremely high pressure, muscles contract. In both situations, the work-producing | |||
process of contraction is associated with a slight reduction in volume. During | |||
contraction of a muscle or nerve, heat is given off, causing the temperature to rise. | |||
During relaxation, recovering from excitation, heat is absorbed (Curtin and Woledge, | |||
1974; Westphal, et al., 1999; Constable, et al. 1997). In the case of a nerve, following | |||
the heating produced by excitation, the temperature of the nerve decreases below the | |||
starting temperature (Abbot, et al., 1965). Stretching a muscle causes energy to be | |||
absorbed (Constable, et al., 1997). Energy changes such as these, without associated | |||
chemical changes, have led some investigators to conclude that muscle tension generation | |||
is "entropy driven" (Davis and Rodgers, 1995). </span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Kelvin's description (1858) of the physics of water in a soap bubble, "…if a film such as a | |||
soap-bubble be enlarged . . . it experiences a cooling effect . . . ," describes the | |||
behavior of nerves and muscles, absorbing energy or heat when they are relaxing (or | |||
elongating), releasing it when they are excited/contracting. </span></span></span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Several groups of experimenters over the last 60 years have tried to discover what happens | |||
to the missing heat; some have suggested electrical or osmotic storage, and some have | |||
demonstrated that stretching generates ATP, arguing for chemical storage. Physical | |||
storage in the form of structural changes in the water-protein-lipid system, interacting | |||
with chemical changes such as ATP synthesis, have hardly been investigated.</span></span | |||
></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Early studies of muscle chemistry and contraction found that adding ATP to a viscous | |||
solution of proteins extracted from muscle reduced its viscosity, and also that the loss | |||
of ATP from muscle caused its hardening, as in rigor mortis; if the pH wasn't too | |||
acidic, the dead muscle would contract as the ATP content decreased. Szent-Gyorgyi found | |||
that a muscle hardened by rigor mortis became soft again when ATP was added. </span | |||
></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Rigor mortis is an extreme state of fatigue, or energy depletion. Early muscle studies | |||
described the phenomenon of "fatigue contracture," in which the muscle, when it reaches | |||
the point at which it stops responding to stimulation, is maximally contracted (this has | |||
also been called delayed relaxation). Ischemic contracture, in the absence of blood | |||
circulation, occurs when the muscle's glycogen is depleted, so that ATP can no longer be | |||
produced anaerobically (Kingsley, et al., 1991). The delayed relaxation of hypothyroid | |||
muscle is another situation in which it is clear that ATP is required for relaxation. | |||
(In the Achilles tendon reflex test, the relaxation rate is visibly slowed in | |||
hypothyroidism.) A delayed T wave in the electrocardiogram, and the diastolic | |||
contracture of the failing heart show the same process of delayed relaxation. | |||
Supplementing the active thyroid hormone, T3, can quickly restore the normal rate of | |||
relaxation, and its beneficial effects have been demonstrated in heart failure | |||
(Pingitore, et al., 2008; Wang, et al., 2006; Pantos, et al., 2007; Galli, et al., | |||
2008).</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>A large part of the magnesium in cells is bound to ATP, and the magnesium-ATP complex is a | |||
factor in muscle relaxation. A deficiency of either ATP or magnesium contributes to | |||
muscle cramping. When a cell is stimulated, causing ATP to release inorganic phosphate, | |||
it also releases magnesium. Above the pH of 6.7, phosphate is doubly ionized, in which | |||
state it has the same kind of structural effect on water that magnesium, calcium, and | |||
sodium have, causing water molecules to be powerfully attracted to the concentrated | |||
electrical charge of the ion. Increasing the free phosphate and magnesium opposes the | |||
effect of the surfaces of fats and proteins on the water structure, and tends to | |||
decrease the solubility of potassium in the water, and to increase the water's | |||
"lipophobic" tendency to minimize its contacts with fats and the fat-like surface of | |||
proteins, causing the proteins to rearrange themselves. </span></span></span></span | |||
></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>These observations relating to the interactions of water, solutes and proteins in muscles | |||
and nerves provide a coherent context for understanding contraction and conduction, | |||
which is lacking in the familiar descriptions based on membranes, pumps, and | |||
cross-bridges, but I think they also provide a uniquely useful context for understanding | |||
the possible dangers of an excess of free phosphate in the body.</span></span></span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>A few people (M. Thomson, J. Gunawardena, A.K. Manrai) are showing that principles of | |||
mass-action help to simplify understanding the networks of phosphorylation and | |||
dephosphorylation that are involved in cell control. But independently from the | |||
phosphorylation of proteins, the presence of phosphate ion in cell water modifies the | |||
cell's ion selectivity, shifting the balance toward increased uptake of sodium and | |||
calcium, decreasing potassium, tending to depolarize and "activate" the cell.</span | |||
></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>About 99% of the publications discussing the mechanism of muscle contraction fail to | |||
mention the presence of water, and there's a similar neglect of water in discussions of | |||
the energy producing processes in the mitochondrion. The failure of mitochondrial energy | |||
production leads to lipid peroxidation, activation of inflammatory processes, and can | |||
cause disintegration of the energy producing structure. Increased phosphate decreases | |||
mitochondrial energy production (Duan and Karmazyn, 1989), causes lipid peroxidation | |||
(Kowaltowski, et al., 1996), and activates inflammation, increasing the processes of | |||
tissue atrophy, fibrosis, and cancer.</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>For about twenty years it has been clear that the metabolic problems that cause calcium to | |||
be lost from bones cause calcium to increase in the soft tissues, such as blood vessels. | |||
The role of phosphate in forming calcium phosphate crystals had until recently been | |||
assumed to be passive, but some specific "mechanistic" effects have been identified. For | |||
example, increased phosphate increases the inflammatory cytokine, osteopontin | |||
(Fatherazi, et al., 2009), which in bone is known to activate the process of | |||
decalcification, and in arteries is involved in calcification processes (Tousoulis, et | |||
al., 2012). In the kidneys, phosphate promotes calcification (Bois and Selye, 1956), and | |||
osteopontin, by its activation of inflammatory T-cells, is involved in the development | |||
of glomerulonephritis, as well as in inflammatory skin reactions (Yu, et al., 1998). | |||
High dietary phosphate increases serum osteopontin, as well as serum phosphate and | |||
parathyroid hormone, and increases the formation of tumors in skin (Camalier, et al., | |||
2010). Besides the activation of cells and cell systems, phosphate (like other | |||
ions with a high ratio of charge to size, including citrate) can activate viruses | |||
(Yamanaka, et al., 1995; Gouvea, et al., 2006). Aromatase, the enzyme that synthesizes | |||
estrogen, is an enzyme that's sensitive to the concentration of phosphate (Bellino and | |||
Holben, 1989).</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>More generally, increased dietary phosphate increases the activity of an important | |||
regulatory enzyme, protein kinase B, which promotes organ growth. A high phosphate diet | |||
increases the growth of liver (Xu, et al., 2008) and lung (Jin, et al., 2007), and | |||
promotes the growth of lung cancer (Jin, et al., 2009). An extreme reduction of | |||
phosphate in the diet wouldn't be appropriate, however, because a phosphate deficiency | |||
stimulates cells to increase the phosphate transporter, increasing the cellular uptake | |||
of phosphate, with an effect similar to the dietary excess of phosphate, i.e., promotion | |||
of lung cancer (Xu, et al., 2010). The optimum dietary amount of phosphate, and its | |||
balance with other minerals, hasn't been determined.</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>While increased phosphate slows mitochondrial energy production, decreasing its | |||
intracellular concentration increases the respiratory rate and the efficiency of ATP | |||
formation. A "deficiency" of polyunsaturated fatty acids has this effect (Nogueira, et | |||
al., 2001), but so does the consumption of fructose (Green, et al., 1993; Lu, et al., | |||
1994).</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>In a 1938 experiment (Brown, et al.) that intended to show the essentiality of unsaturated fats, a | |||
man, William Brown, lived for six months on a 2500 calorie diet consisting of sucrose syrup, a | |||
gallon of milk (some of it in the form of cottage cheese), and the juice of half an orange, | |||
besides some vitamins and minerals. The experimenters remarked about the surprising | |||
disappearance of the normal fatigue after a day's work, as well as the normalization of his high | |||
blood pressure and high cholesterol, and the permanent disappearance of his frequent life-long | |||
migraine headaches. His respiratory quotient increased (producing more carbon dioxide), as well | |||
as his rate of resting metabolism. I think the most interesting part of the experiment was that | |||
his blood phosphate decreased. In two measurements during the experimental diet, his fasting | |||
plasma inorganic phosphorus was 3.43 and 2.64 mg. per 100 ml. of plasma, and six month after he | |||
had returned to a normal diet the number was 4.2 mg/100 ml. Both the deficiency of the | |||
"essential" unsaturated fatty acids, and the high sucrose intake probably contributed to | |||
lowering the phosphate.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>In 2000, researchers who were convinced that fructose is harmful to the health, reasoned | |||
that its harmful effects would be exacerbated by consuming it in combination with a diet | |||
deficient in magnesium. Eleven men consumed, for six months, test diets with high | |||
fructose corn syrup or starch, along with some fairly normal U.S. foods, and with either | |||
extremely low magnesium content, or with slightly deficient magnesium content. The | |||
authors' conclusion was clearly stated in the title of their article, that the | |||
combination adversely affects the mineral balance of the body. </span></span></span | |||
></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>However, looking at their results in the context of these other studies of the effects of | |||
fructose on phosphate, I don't think their conclusion is correct. Even on the extremely | |||
low magnesium intake, both their magnesium and calcium balances were positive, meaning | |||
that on average their bodies accumulated a little magnesium and calcium, even though men | |||
aged 22 to 40 presumably weren't growing very much. To steadily accumulate both calcium | |||
and magnesium, with the calcium retention much larger than the magnesium, the minerals | |||
were probably mostly being incorporated into their bones. Their phosphate balance, | |||
however, was slightly negative on the "high fructose" diet. If the sugar was having the | |||
same effect that it had on William Brown in 1938 (and in animal experiments), some of | |||
the phosphate loss was accounted for by the reduced amount in blood and other body | |||
fluids, but to continue through the months of the experiment, some of it must have | |||
represented a change in the composition of the bones. When there is more carbon dioxide | |||
in the body fluids, calcium carbonate can be deposited in the bones (Messier, et al., | |||
1979). Increased carbon dioxide could account for a prolonged negative phosphate | |||
balance, by taking its place in the bones in combination with calcium and | |||
magnesium. </span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Another important effect of carbon dioxide is in the regulation of both calcium and | |||
phosphate, by increasing the absorption and retention of calcium (Canzanello, et al., | |||
1995), and by increasing the excretion of phosphate. Increased carbon dioxide (as | |||
dissolved gas) and bicarbonate (as sodium bicarbonate) both increase the excretion of | |||
phosphate in the urine, even in the absence of the parathyroid hormone. Below the normal | |||
level of serum bicarbonate, reabsorption of phosphate by the kidneys is greatly | |||
increased (Jehle, et al., 1999). Acetazolamide increases the body's retention of carbon | |||
dioxide, and increases the amount of phosphate excreted in the urine. </span></span | |||
></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Much of the calcium dissolved in the blood is in the form of a complex of calcium and bicarbonate, | |||
with a single positive charge (Hughes, et al., 1984). Failure to consider this complexed form of | |||
calcium leads to errors in measuring the amount of calcium in the blood, and in interpreting its | |||
physiological effects, including its intracellular behavior. Hyperventilation can cause cramping | |||
of skeletal muscles, constriction of blood vessels, and excitation of platelets and other cells; | |||
the removal of carbon dioxide from the blood lowers the carbonic acid, changing the state and | |||
function of calcium. Hyperventilation increases phosphate and parathyroid hormone, and decreases | |||
calcium (Krapf, et al., 1992).</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Since estrogen tends to cause hyperventilation, lowering carbon dioxide, its role in phosphate | |||
metabolism should be investigated more thoroughly. Work by Han, et al. (2002) and Xu, et al. | |||
(2003) showed that estrogen increases phosphate reabsorption by the kidney, but estrogen also | |||
increases cortisol, which decreases reabsorption, so the role of estrogen in the whole system | |||
has to be be considered. </span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>This calcium solubilizing effect of bicarbonate, combined with its phosphaturic effect, | |||
probably accounts for the relaxing effect of carbon dioxide on the blood vessels and | |||
bronchial smooth muscles, and for the prevention of vascular calcification by the | |||
thyroid hormones (Sato, et al., 2005, Tatar, 2009, Kim, et al., 2012). Distensibility of | |||
the blood vessels and heart, increased by carbon dioxide, is decreased in | |||
hypothyroidism, heart failure, and by phosphate. </span></span></span></span></span | |||
> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>While fructose lowers intracellular phosphate, it also lowers the amount that the intestine | |||
absorbs from food (Kirchner, et al.,2008), and the Milne-Nielsen study suggests that it | |||
increases phosphate loss through the kidneys. The "anti-aging" protein, klotho, | |||
increases the ability of the kidneys to excrete phosphate (Dërmaku-Sopjani, et al., | |||
2011), and like fructose, it supports energy production and maintains thermogenesis | |||
(Mori, et al., 2000). </span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Lowering the amount of phosphate in the blood allows the parathyroid hormone to decrease. | |||
While the parathyroid hormone also prevents phosphate reabsorption by the kidneys, it | |||
causes mast cells to release serotonin (and serotonin increases the kidneys' | |||
reabsorption of phosphate), and possibly has other pro-inflammatory effects. For | |||
example, deleting the PTH gene compensates for the harmful (accelerated calcification | |||
and osteoporosis) effects of deleting the klotho gene, apparently by preventing the | |||
increase of osteopontin (Yuan, et al., 2012).</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Niacinamide is another nutrient that lowers serum phosphate (Cheng, et al., 2008), by | |||
inhibiting intestinal absorption (Katai, et al., 1989), and also by reducing its | |||
reabsorption by the kidneys (Campbell, et al., 1989). Niacinamide's reduction of free | |||
fatty acids by inhibiting lipolysis, protecting the use of glucose for energy, might be | |||
involved in its effect on phosphate (by analogy with the phosphate lowering action of a | |||
deficiency of polyunsaturated fatty acids). Aspirin is another antilipolytic substance | |||
(de Zentella, et al., 2002) which stimulates energy production from sugar and lowers | |||
phosphate, possibly combined with improved magnesium retention (Yamada and Morohashi, | |||
1986).</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>A diet that provides enough calcium to limit activity of the parathyroid glands, and that | |||
is low in phosphate and polyunsaturated fats, with sugar rather than starch as the main | |||
carbohydrate, possibly supplemented by niacinamide and aspirin, should help to avoid | |||
some of the degenerative processes associated with high phosphate: fatigue, heart | |||
failure, movement discoordination, hypogonadism, infertility, vascular calcification, | |||
emphysema, cancer, osteoporosis, and atrophy of skin, skeletal muscle, intestine, | |||
thymus, and spleen (Ohnishi and Razzaque, 2010; Shiraki-Iida, et al., 2000; Kuro-o, et | |||
al., 1997; Osuka and Razzaque, 2012). The foods naturally highest in phosphate, relative | |||
to calcium, are cereals, legumes, meats, and fish. Many prepared foods contain added | |||
phosphate. Foods with a higher, safer ratio of calcium to phosphate are leaves, such as | |||
kale, turnip greens, and beet greens, and many fruits, milk, and cheese. Coffee, besides | |||
being a good source of magnesium, is probably helpful for lowering phosphate, by its | |||
antagonism to adenosine (Coulson, et al., 1991).</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Although increased phosphate generally causes vascular calcification (increasing rigidity, with | |||
increased systolic blood pressure), when a high level of dietary phosphate comes from milk and | |||
cheese, it is epidemiologically associated with reduced blood pressure (Takeda, et al., | |||
2012).</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal" | |||
>Phosphate toxicity offers some interesting insights into stress and aging, helping to | |||
explain the protective effects of carbon dioxide, thyroid hormone, sugar, niacinamide, | |||
and calcium. It also suggests that other natural substances used as food additives | |||
should be investigated more thoroughly. Excessive citric acid, for example, might | |||
activate dormant cancer cells (Havard, et al., 2011), and has been associated with | |||
malignancy (Blüml, et al., 2011). Nutritional research has hardly begun to investigate | |||
the optimal ratios of minerals, fats, amino acids, and other things in foods, and how | |||
they interact with the natural toxicants, antinutrients, and hormone disrupters in many | |||
organisms used for food.</span></span></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"> <span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
><span style="font-style: normal"><span style="font-weight: normal"><h3>REFERENCES</h3></span></span | |||
></span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>J Physiology 1962; 161, 379-391. Volume changes in frog muscle during contraction. Abbott C & | |||
Baskin RJ.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
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<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Biophys J. 1973 Apr;13(4):385-98. Ionic partition between surface and bulk water in a silica gel. A | |||
biological model. Wiggins PM.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol. 2008 Oct;295(4):G654-63. High dietary inorganic phosphate | |||
enhances cap-dependent protein translation, cell-cycle progression, and angiogenesis in the | |||
livers of young mice. Xu CX, Jin H, Lim HT, Kim JE, Shin JY, Lee ES, Chung YS, Lee YS, Beck G | |||
Jr, Lee KH, Cho MH.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Nutr Cancer. 2010;62(4):525-32. Low dietary inorganic phosphate stimulates lung tumorigenesis | |||
through altering protein translation and cell cycle in K-ras(LA1) mice. Xu CX, Jin H, Lim HT, Ha | |||
YC, Chae CH, An GH, Lee KH, Cho MH.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol. 2003 Dec;285(6):G1317-24. Regulation of intestinal | |||
NaPi-IIb cotransporter gene expression by estrogen. Xu H, Uno JK, Inouye M, Xu L, Drees JB, | |||
Collins JF, Ghishan FK.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>"These studies demonstrate for the first time that estrogen stimulates intestinal sodium-dependent | |||
phosphate absorption in female rats. This stimulation is associated with increased NaPi-IIb mRNA | |||
and protein expression."</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Nihon Yakurigaku Zasshi. 1986 Nov;88(5):395-401. [Effect of sodium salicylate on renal handling of | |||
calcium, phosphate and magnesium]. [Article in Japanese] Yamada S, Morohashi T. "On the | |||
other hand, we observed increased urinary excretion of Pi and decreased Mg excretion, which | |||
resulted from the changes in tubular</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>reabsorption of Pi and Mg, respectively."</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>J Biol Chem. 1995 Dec 15;270(50):30168-72. Stimulation of the herpes simplex virus type I protease | |||
by antichaeotrophic salts. Yamanaka G, DiIanni CL, O'Boyle DR 2nd, Stevens J, Weinheimer SP, | |||
Deckman IC, Matusick-Kumar L, Colonno RJ.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>Proc Assoc Am Physicians. 1998 Jan-Feb;110(1):50-64. A functional role for osteopontin in | |||
experimental crescentic glomerulonephritis in the rat. Yu XQ, Nikolic-Paterson DJ, Mu W, | |||
Giachelli CM, Atkins RC, Johnson RJ, Lan HY.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>PLoS Genet. 2012;8(5):e1002726. Deletion of PTH rescues skeletal abnormalities and high osteopontin | |||
levels in Klotho-/- mice. Yuan Q, Sato T, Densmore M, Saito H, Schüler C, Erben RG, Lanske | |||
B.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
<span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span | |||
style="font-size: medium" | |||
>J Pharm Pharmacol. 2002 Apr;54(4):577-82. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs inhibit | |||
epinephrine- and cAMP-mediated lipolysis in isolated rat adipocytes. de Zentella PM, | |||
Vázquez-Meza H, Piña-Zentella G, Pimentel L, Piña E.</span></span></span> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<p></p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2013. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<p><strong>Physiology texts and the real world</strong></p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
Hospital accidents kill more people than highway accidents. But when people die while they are receiving | |||
standard, but irrational and antiscientific treatments and “support,” the deaths aren’t counted as accidents. | |||
The numbers are large. Medical training and medical textbooks bear great responsibility for those unnecessary | |||
deaths. Most medical research is done under the influence of mistaken assumptions, and so fails to correct the | |||
myths of medical training. If the “consumers” or victims of medicine are willing to demand concrete | |||
justifications before accepting “standard procedures,” they will create an atmosphere in which medical mythology | |||
will be a little harder to sustain. | |||
<hr /> | |||
A sentence taken out of context is likely to be misleading. A chemical equation that is concerned only with the | |||
reactants, catalyst, and product, can be misleading, and its industrial application is likely to produce | |||
devastation and pollution along with the intended product. In nature and industry, the reactants, products, and | |||
energy changes are linked to the ecology and to the economy. In physiological chemistry, events in the organism | |||
are linked to the environment so closely that food, water, air, soil, and pollution form a firmly linked | |||
functional system. But “medical physiology” has evolved as a separate thing, in which formulas that describe | |||
specific situations are linked to each other by fragmentary schemes, terminology, and computer models. This | |||
jerrybuilt scheme is even more roughly set into a hypothetical environment of “the origin of life,” “evolution,” | |||
“inheritance,” “society,” and a few other perfunctory contextualizations that have no more relevance to the | |||
subject than do the literary epigraphs that are often used at the beginning of chapters in medical books, to | |||
signify that the author isn’t just a technical hack. This physiological mythology has made possible a practice | |||
of medicine in which “genes” and “a virus” are regularly invoked to explain things that can’t be remedied, and | |||
in which any fleshy body is described as “well nourished,” and in which malnutrition and poisoning by pollutants | |||
are systematically dismissed as explanations for sicknesses, while thousands of different drugs are administered | |||
according to instructions given by their salesmen. It is also deeply linked to attitudes that have turned the | |||
practice of medicine into the surest way for an individual to get rich and retire early. It creates a sense of | |||
confidence that the physician is doing the right thing, because there is a little physiological rationale for | |||
everything. <strong><em>When a practice is replaced by its opposite, there is also a rationale for | |||
that. </em></strong>In fact, medical textbooks are written to rationalize the highly arbitrary | |||
practices of the industry. If, for some reason, perpetual motion machines had been as successful economically as | |||
steam engines were, laws of thermodynamics would have been written to describe them, just as thermodynamic laws | |||
were invented to describe the theory of steam engines. It was odd and interesting when a vice presidential | |||
candidate stepped to the podium several years ago and asked “who am I? What am I doing here?” But those | |||
questions are really of the greatest importance and interest, and physiology should be an attempt to understand | |||
more fully what we are, what we are doing, and how we are doing it. When we have comprehensive answers to those | |||
questions, then we will be in a position to create systematically valid solutions for our problems. For | |||
physiology, the equivalent of medicine’s “first do no harm” would be “first, don’t believe unfounded doctrines.” | |||
Accepting that principle puts a person into a critical attitude, and experiments can become actually | |||
“empirical,” an extension of experience that allows you to perceive new things, rather than “testing | |||
hypotheses.” Unless a hypothesis is a generalization from real experience, rather than a deduction from a | |||
doctrine, progress is likely to be very slow. A first step in developing a critical attitude is to identify the | |||
idols that stand in the way of real understanding. | |||
<strong>Immunity, intelligence, appetites, tumor growth, aging, the proper development of organs—everything that | |||
we think of as the biological foundations of health and sickness—will be misinterpreted if there are | |||
fundamental misconceptions about physiology.</strong> | |||
Physiology is the study of the vital functions of organisms, but especially when talking about “pathologic | |||
physiology,” great emphasis in physiology textbooks is given to the processes that maintain homeostasis of | |||
the <em>milieu interieur,</em> or the constancy of composition of the “fluid in which tissue cells are | |||
bathed.” Since cells are embedded in a gel-like matrix, “connective tissue,” the connective tissue should have | |||
some serious attention in physiology courses, but in practice its composition is described, and then the rest of | |||
physiology treats it as the “extracellular space.” Only specialists in the extracellular matrix are likely to | |||
take it seriously as a factor in physiology. If medical physiologists are likely to think of cells as being | |||
“bathed in fluid” which fills the empty spaces around the cells, they are also likely to think of the cell’s | |||
interior as a watery solution which “fills the space enclosed by the cell membrane.” It is this image of the | |||
organism that has made traditional biochemistry possible, since enzymes extracted from cells and dissolved in | |||
water had been thought to function the way they function in the living state. But the living cell isn’t like a | |||
tiny water-filled test-tube. | |||
<strong>Some of the points that should be considered in a realistic (and therefore coherent) physiology | |||
text:</strong> | |||
<strong>Connective tissues, ground substance</strong>— making a multicell organism--secreting the right amount, | |||
modifying/maintaining it, responding to the scaffolding--where the crucial <em>milieu interieur</em | |||
> is. | |||
<strong>Cellular energy, a structural idea</strong>—a finely organized catalyst, a readiness for work, and | |||
conditions that determine the equilibrium of reactions. | |||
<strong>The dimensions of the organism</strong> range from cellular fields to organismic intentions, via | |||
functional systems. | |||
<strong>Physiology should be understood in terms of its geochemical setting,</strong> because otherwise | |||
basic definitions will be built up in the belief that life is discontinuous from its physical environment, | |||
separated by membranes, and maintained by the expense of energy mainly to preserve gradients across those | |||
membranes<strong>; </strong>while in actuality the chemical energy released by living substance is spent in | |||
renewing structures, and the gradients are mainly passive physical-chemical consequences of structure. The | |||
spontaneous polymerization that occurs under volcanic conditions creates substances with intrinsic functions. | |||
The living state is a substance that is always being renewed as it interacts with its environment, and from the | |||
larger persepective, it is an evolving catalyst that modifies the environment so that the whole system | |||
approaches equilibrium with the energy that flows through it. Since the evolving system stores energy in its | |||
structure, the cosmic energy sources and sinks are at the boundaries of the system, and are the only questions | |||
that (so far) transcend the issue of life in its environment. The chemistry of the planet is tied up with cosmic | |||
energy, but the nature of the system as a whole is still relatively unexplored. If plants are bracketed by the | |||
sun, carbon dioxide and water, animals are bracketed by sugar and oxygen. | |||
<strong>Acid-base</strong> <strong>regulation</strong>--selectivity; physical chemistry of coral, bone; | |||
kidney, lung; roles of oxygen, carbon dioxide and protein. | |||
<strong>An Arrhenius base</strong> is something which produces hydroxide ions when it’s dissolved in water. | |||
<strong>Metal, an element that forms a base</strong> by combining with a hydroxyl group (or groups). | |||
<strong>Base,</strong> an electropositive element (cation) that combines with an anion to form a salt; a | |||
compound ionizing to yield hydroxyl ion. | |||
<strong>Electropositive</strong> <strong>atoms</strong> tend to lose electrons. | |||
<strong>Electronegative atoms</strong>, such as oxygen, chlorine, and fluorine, tend to take up an electron and | |||
to become negatively ionized. | |||
<strong>Definitions of Arrhenius and Lewis</strong> for acids and bases. It’s important to keep both sides | |||
of an ionizable compound in mind, and to pay more attention to electrons than to protons. | |||
<strong>A</strong> <strong>Lewis acid</strong> is an electron acceptor. | |||
<strong>Alkali reserve, (Stedman’s phrase:) “the basic ions, mainly the bicarbonates” (bicarbonates of this or | |||
that; there is no abstract “bicarbonate.”)</strong> | |||
<strong>Carbon dioxide is a neutral Lewis acid, that associates with the hydroxide ion. </strong>(This | |||
observation may be shocking to people who have thought too long in terms of abstract “bicarbonate.”) | |||
<strong>Carbon dioxide regulates water, minerals, energy and cellular stability, excitation, and | |||
efficiency.</strong> | |||
<strong>Cellular respiration regulates both energy and substance disposition.</strong> | |||
<strong>Respiration regulates osmotic/oncotic pressure, including the hydration (and dehydration) of the | |||
extracellular matrix.</strong> | |||
<strong>Electrons, positive charges, electronegativity, and induction: </strong>The unity of metabolism and | |||
signalling interactions; hormones are physical-chemical agents, not information carriers. Electrets, | |||
piezoelectricity, and crystal/bond stresses are relevant to physiology; the behavior of ionic materials in bulk | |||
water provides misleading images for physiology. Space charges are more relevant to physiology than fluxes in | |||
ion channels. | |||
<strong>Inductive</strong> effect: an electronic effect transmitted through bonds in an organic compound | |||
due to the electronegativity of substituents. | |||
<strong>Cooperative adsorption</strong> interacts with inductive effects producing coherent, systemic | |||
changes and stabilities. | |||
<strong>Steroids, peptides, biogenic amines, and other things considered as hormones</strong> and | |||
transmitters, are active as modifiers of <strong><em>adsorption, induction, and metabolic pathways.</em | |||
></strong> Their structural effects create, or inhibit, phase transitions in cells. Synergies of | |||
radiation, estrogen, and hypoxia are intelligible in terms of phase instability. | |||
<strong>Alkaloids: </strong>organic substances occurring naturally, which are basic, forming salts with | |||
acids. The basic group is usually an amino function. | |||
<strong>The disposition of electrons</strong> in cells and tissues is a global phenomenon, integrating | |||
metabolism, pH, osmolarity, and sensitivity. <strong><em>Excitation creates a field of alkalinity.</em | |||
></strong> | |||
<strong>Cellular differentiation; developmental fields, polarities.</strong> | |||
<strong>Regulation of water; </strong>electroosmosis; edema in relation to cellular energy. | |||
<strong>Vicinal water, all water near surfaces, most of the water in cells, has special properties.</strong> | |||
<strong>Needs on the cellular level guide the organism’s adaptations.</strong> | |||
<strong>Functional systems, </strong>multilevel adaptive integrations, in which many “systems” and cell | |||
types are organized according to activity and needs, leading to anatomical and functional changes. | |||
<strong>Energy and relaxation, cellular inhibition, </strong>a structural state involving the entire cell | |||
substance. High energy phosphate bonds explain nothing about the cell’s energy. | |||
<strong>Multilevel self-regulation;</strong> cell intelligence, organic compensations (function producing | |||
structure, organ regeneration, vascular neogenesis, stem cell functions, immunity/morphogenesis, | |||
tubercles/tumors, fat/fiber/muscle/phagocytosis) permits highly organized and novel adaptive responses, which | |||
are goal-directed rather than mechanistically “programmed” from the genes. | |||
<strong>Sensitivity and motility</strong>—plants and animals, subtle cues, rhythms, motivations. | |||
<strong>Adaptation—learning, intention, and stress.</strong> | |||
<strong>Light, energy, motion; </strong>pigments and electron donor-acceptor bonds. | |||
<strong>Acceptor of action, innate and learned models of reality</strong>. Intentionality is involved in | |||
“reflexes.” | |||
<strong>Digestion</strong>—bowel and liver; immune system and nervous system; <strong>need </strong | |||
>and intepretation, analysis; approximation and assimilation. Intestinal flora and detoxifying.<strong | |||
> </strong>Detoxifying fatty acids, estrogen, insulin, nerve chemicals, etc. <strong> </strong> | |||
<strong>Nutrition—</strong>appetite and satisfaction. | |||
<strong>Reproduction, puberty, menopause;</strong> how they are affected by the environment. | |||
<strong>Humor, curiosity, exploratory and inventive potentials and need. </strong> | |||
<strong>Growth and aging;</strong> energy, individualization and generalization; mitosis and meiosis, germ | |||
cells. | |||
<strong>Nurse cells, </strong>their interactions in various organs<strong>.</strong> | |||
<strong>Chalones,</strong> wound hormones, phagocytes, regeneration, nerve products; inhibition of growth | |||
by nerves. Frog extracts in development. Anatomy is a dynamic system, whose integration is part of physiology. | |||
<strong>Inflammations and tumors are systemic events, </strong>in causes and effects. | |||
<strong>Inflammation, edema, fibrosis, calcification, and atrophy--the basic pathology</strong>. | |||
<strong><em>Organisms relate to the biosphere as factors in the creation of new equilibria.</em></strong> | |||
Between 1947 and 1956, Arthur C. Guyton, of Ole Miss, wrote a textbook of medical physiology, and one of his | |||
students, J. E. Hall, has added chapters to it. It is the most widely used physiology textbook in the world. It | |||
may be more influential than the bible, since it has shaped the behavior of millions of doctors, affecting | |||
billions of people. Its success probably has something to do with Guyton’s unusual personal experience. After | |||
graduating from Harvard Medical School and, along with others from Harvard, working in germ warfare,* he | |||
contracted polio, and returned to Mississippi. As someone moving from the centers of excellence and power to the | |||
most backward state in the nation, instead of using textbooks he wrote handouts for the classes he taught there, | |||
devising what he thought were plausible explanations for everything in physiology. A personalized perspective | |||
and desire to keep things simple made the book, based on those handouts, readable and popular. The | |||
circulatory system, and the movement of fluids in the body, are at the center of physiology, so it is of | |||
interest that Guyton believed that, in the “spaces around cells,” there is a negative pressure, a partial | |||
vacuum, that sucks fluid out of the capillaries. He believed that this suction would balance a column of 5 or 10 | |||
mm of mercury. The rib cage, and the force of the diaphragm muscle, can maintain a negative pressure around the | |||
lungs, preventing their elastic collapse, but there is no such shell around the rest of the body; if elastic | |||
fibers of connective tissue could be anchored to such a shell, then such a suction/vacuum would be | |||
conceivable. Hydrostatic and osmotic pressures interact in tissues, but even the hydrostatic forces | |||
produced by the heartbeat are known only approximately, as estimates, on the microscopic level. The belief in | |||
subatmospheric interstitial pressure is unreasonable on its face, and measurements are so inaccurate in the | |||
microcirculation that its disproof would be somewhat like proving that fairies aren’t responsible for the | |||
Brownian motions seen under a microscope. The oncotic/osmotic behavior of proteins in the blood and | |||
extracellular (the term <strong><em>interstitial</em></strong> implies the presence of empty spaces | |||
which aren’t really there) fluid is usually, in medical physiology, assumed to be a fixed quantity determined by | |||
the nature of the polymer. Swelling and syneresis (contraction) of gels, with the absorption or release of | |||
water, are strongly influenced by the electrical properties of the system, which includes solvent water, bound | |||
water, and small solutes and ions as well as the polymers. Changes in pH and ionic strength and temperature, and | |||
the presence of solutes modifying the polymer’s affinity for water, affect the osmotic behavior of the polymer, | |||
and of gels formed by such polymers. Since the extracellular spaces are mainly filled with solid gels, Guyton’s | |||
image of simple fluids entering and leaving these “spaces” reveals a major conceptual error, and that error has | |||
been widely propagated by medical professors. If a person imagines open spaces, interstices, between cells, then | |||
the question of the fluid pressure in these chambers seems reasonable, and the factors that produce edema will | |||
be thought of mechanically. But if we call the material between cells the “extracellular matrix,” and recognize | |||
its relatively solid gel nature, we will see the problem of edema in physical-chemical terms, rather than as a | |||
problem of simple hydraulics. [*Biographical side-lights<strong>:</strong> Guyton graduated from Ole Miss | |||
in 1939, got his medical degree from Harvard in 1943, where the department of bacteriology had a grant to study | |||
the polio virus, and where he worked with people “involved in the war effort,” and then from 1944 to 1946 was | |||
involved in germ warfare research, mainly at Camp Detrick. Camp Detrick had been established as the center for | |||
chemical and biological warfare research, and a test site was established in Mississippi in 1943. Guyton’s first | |||
paper was on aerosol research (published in 1946), and studies at that time were being done to improve the | |||
spreading of germs in aerosols. Bacterial aerosols were tested on the public in San Francisco, in 1950. Guyton’s | |||
Harvard colleagues established a polio research lab at Children’s Hospital Medical Center. When he left the | |||
navy, after working at Camp Detrick, Guyton resumed work at Mass General, and contracted polio before he | |||
finished his residency.] | |||
<strong>Idols of medical physiology, foundations and cornerstones for the landfill, some things you shouldn’t | |||
know about physiology:</strong> | |||
Genes control the cell, the organism is its genome, the nucleus regulates the cytoplasm. Information flowing | |||
from the genes produces and maintains the organism. Acquired traits aren’t passed on; mutations are random, the | |||
genome doesn’t acquire information from the organism or environment, the germ-line is isolated. Physiology is | |||
bounded by the informational function of genes. The cell is a drop of water containing dissolved chemicals | |||
enclosed in a membrane. Random diffusion governs energy metabolism, gene induction, and other | |||
intracellular events. Enzyme reactions occur when dissolved molecules randomly diffusing come into contact with | |||
a suitable enzyme, as described by the Michaelis-Menton equation. The Donnan equilibrium explains cellular | |||
electrical behavior, and since ions are distributed across the membrane by active transport, the membrane | |||
potential is maintained by the expense of metabolic energy. Water is just a peculiar solvent. Water structure | |||
changes only at extremes of temperature. Cells are perfect osmometers. There are empty spaces between cells. The | |||
membrane regulates the composition of the cytoplasm, with pumps and pores and channels. Cells must produce | |||
enough energy to keep the pumps running. Membrane receptors regulate cell responses. Cells are activated by | |||
receptors, and physical forces for which there are no receptors have no effect on cells except when they are | |||
above a threshold at which they cause discrete chemical changes. The nervous system is hard-wired. Brain and | |||
heart cells don’t regenerate. There is an immune system, whose function is to destroy pathogens, with | |||
inflammation as one of its functions, and its specific reactions are determined by the selection of clones which | |||
were generated by random mutations; an autonomic nervous system, which regulates visceral reflexes by | |||
innervating, via receptors, smooth muscle, heart muscle, and glands; an endocrine system, regulated mainly by | |||
negative feedback, that produces hormone molecules that carry messages to the receptors in certain target | |||
tissues. Inflammation is produced by germs, and is a defensive reaction of the immune system, and so is good. | |||
(Sterile inflammation is too confusing to include within the ambit of medical physiology, since it is associated | |||
with serious harm to the organism. The roles in inflammation of the nervous and endocrine systems and kidneys | |||
and membrane pumps and osmoregulation aren’t discussed in polite books.) During development, cells are organized | |||
into systems, and they don’t change their type. In the case of germ cells, their type is determined before they | |||
exist. Cells are able to undergo only about 50 divisions, and most of those divisions are used up in producing | |||
an adult organism. The committed nature of the organism’s cells and anatomy make radical functional adaptation | |||
impossible. Hormones and transmitter substances act only through specific receptor molecules. High energy | |||
phosphate bonds in compounds such as ATP provide energy to molecular pumps and motors. Molecular forces | |||
act only locally. Pathologies are primarily local: Inflammations and tumors have local causes, and their effects | |||
are local. Specific and local treatments are ideal. Circulation is treated as a plumbing problem, tumors as | |||
clones of defective cells. Consciousness is produced by nervous signals that transmit information, and can be | |||
compared with the handling of information by computers. Excitation and inhibition are functions of cell | |||
membranes. Artificial intelligence research into computational and nerve net systems is as much a part of | |||
research into the physiology of consciousness as computer modeling of feedback systems is a form of research | |||
into endocrine physiology and immunology. Estrogen, testosterone, thyroid, prolactin, serotonin, adrenalin, | |||
prostaglandins, etc., are carriers of information in an informational system. Cyclic functions and behaviors are | |||
governed by genes. The existence of hard-wired informational receptor systems and gene-induction systems is | |||
necessary because of the random diffusional nature of the other cellular processes and materials. | |||
<strong><em>Essentially, an organism consists of random inert matter given form and activity by the imposition | |||
of genetic information accumulated through random mutations.</em></strong> | |||
(There are really people who still believe those things.) | |||
<strong><em>A NOTE ON SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTIONS:</em></strong> | |||
If scientific revolutions depended on "the authorities," then the Copernican revolution would be dated from the | |||
Pope's apology. The fact that the major journals are controlled by antiscientific dimwits helps to define where | |||
science exists. Gilbert Ling's revolution in cell physiology has been moved along by the existence of the | |||
journal, Physiological Chemistry and Physics (and medical NMR). Michael Polanyi, in <strong><em>Personal | |||
Knowledge,</em></strong> maybe even more than Thomas Kuhn did in his famous book (<em>Structure of | |||
Scientific Revolutions</em>), helped to solidify the belief that there is a real international monolithic | |||
"community of science." Even though Polanyi, working "in isolation" in Hungary created his general and elegant | |||
adsorption isotherm, he didn't teach it to his own students, because of his belief in that community of science, | |||
which ridiculed his work because it wasn't based on their (false) assumptions about the electrical nature of | |||
matter. The linguistic and cultural isolation of Hungary and Russia from Europe has permitted them to | |||
evolve distinctive scientific cultures. C.C. Lindegren, in Cold War in Biology, showed that political forces in | |||
the U.S. and England suppressed anti-Mendelian ideas by identifying them as subversive, imposing the Central | |||
Dogma of genetics. But even within an authoritarian national tradition, there are little communities of | |||
science, where the real development of thought can take place. Perceptions that are clear and useful are the | |||
real revolutions in science, and the rest of it has to do with social and financial commitments. Even in the | |||
short time since Kuhn wrote his book, the status of medicine has changed significantly, putting it right up with | |||
militarism and the energy industry as a source of political and economic power. The authoritarian monolith that | |||
has been known as the community of science has become increasingly (even in areas such as astronomy, where | |||
commercial interests aren't so crudely involved) a structure of cultural propaganda maintained by bullying and | |||
fraud. Since the "normal science" in these authoritarian settings is dedicated to evading the truth, it becomes | |||
almost a guide to where to look for the truth. It's sort of analogous to the "mystery" of why breast cancer | |||
mortality is lowest in the poorest part of the U.S., Appalachia, and highest in the richest regions: the medical | |||
industry goes where the money is, taking death with it. Science, like health, thrives on the neglect of the | |||
corrupt industry. I have always felt that the cybernetic definition of communication as the transfer of | |||
something that makes a difference should be applied to speech and writing. As a student and teacher, I saw that | |||
information which made a difference was the essence of intellectual excitement and growth. But making a | |||
difference is exactly what university administrators and journal editors don't want. © Ray Peat Ph.D. | |||
2014. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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The Progesterone Deceptions | |||
</title> | |||
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<h1> | |||
The Progesterone Deceptions | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1930s, it was demonstrated that estrogen, even in small doses, produced abortions, and that when it | |||
is given early enough, even a very small dose will prevent implantation of the fertilized embryo. | |||
Progesterone was known, by the early 1940s, to protect against the many toxic effects of estrogen, including | |||
abortion, but it was also known as nature's contraceptive, since it can prevent pregnancy without harmful | |||
side-effects, by different mechanisms, including prevention of sperm entry into the uterus. That is, | |||
progesterone prevents the miscarriages which result from excess estrogen (1,2), but if used before | |||
intercourse, it prevents conception, and thus is a true contraceptive, while estrogen is an abortifacient, | |||
not a contraceptive. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1950s, there was a search for chemicals which would prevent ovulation. According to Carl Djerassi (), | |||
drug companies were extremely reluctant to risk a religious backlash against their other products, and so | |||
hesitated to market contraceptives. Obviously, the induction of monthly abortions would have been even | |||
harder to sell. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
According to Djerassi (3), "Until the middle 1940s ti was assumed that progesterone's biological activity | |||
was extremely specific and that almost any alteration of the molecule would diminish or abolish its | |||
activity." This would obviously discourage interest from the drug companies, who could patent a substance | |||
which they had chemically modified, but could not patent a simple natural substance. However, many | |||
substances--even non-steroidal chemicals--were known to have estrogenic action. (4) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By 1942, Hans Selye had demonstrated that natural steroids retain their activity when administered orally. | |||
But every drug company with a steroid patent had an obvious interest in having the public believe that there | |||
is a reason that the natural steroids cannot be conveniently used. The doctrine that natural steroids are | |||
destroyed by stomach acid appeared, was promoted, and was accepted--without any supporting evidence. In the | |||
manufacture of progesterone, the precursor steroid is boiled in hydrochloric acid to free it from its | |||
glucose residue. No one seriously believed that stomach acid hurts progesterone, except the public--and the | |||
doctors, who had seen the claim in their medical journals, and had heard it from drug salesmen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The myth stopped the use of the cheap tablets of progesterone, as tablets of the synthetic "progestins" came | |||
on the market, at a much higher price. Doctors who insisted on using real progesterone were forced to buy it | |||
in an injectable form. As a result, solubility became an issue. Progesterone is extremely insoluble in | |||
water, and, though it is vastly more soluble in vegetable oil than in water, it does not stay in solution at | |||
room temperature even at the low concentration of 1 part in 1000 parts of a typical vegetable oil. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When people speak of an allergy to progesterone (or even to penicillin) they generally are not aware of the | |||
presence of a very toxic solvent.(5) For a time, progesterone was often sold dissolved in benzyl benzoate. | |||
The Physician's Desk Reference warned of possible allergic reactions to progesterone. Now, it is supposedly | |||
sold dissolved in vegetable oil, with about 10% benzyl alcohol as--supposedly--a "bacteriostatic agent." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bacteriostatic water contains 0.9% to 1.9% benzyl alcohol, and can irreversibly harm nerves. (6,7) Its use | |||
in hospitals killed thousands of babies. Awareness of benzyl alcohol's toxicity goes back to 1918 at least; | |||
it was proposed as an effective insecticide, and was found to be toxic to many animal systems. The safe | |||
systemic dose (7) is exceeded with an injection of 150 mg. of progesterone, yet the local concentration is | |||
far higher. It can cause a severe reaction even when used at a lower concentration, in bacteriostatic water. | |||
(5) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Other alcohols, including ethanol, have been used as solvents, but since they (ethanol even more than benzyl | |||
alcohol) have an affinity for water, the solution decomposes in contact with tissue water. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In spite of the toxicity of the vehicle, several beneficial effects can be obtained with injected | |||
progesterone, in serious conditions such as epilepsy or caner of the breast or uterus. Many researchers have | |||
commented on the very obvious difficulty of giving very large amounts of progesterone. (8) My comparisons of | |||
oral progesterone in tocopherol with other forms and methods of administration show a roughly similar | |||
efficiency for oral and inject progesterone, and about 1/20 the effect for suppositories. Crystals of | |||
progesterone are visible in the suppositories I have examined, and this material is obviously wasted. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
An old theory of vitamin E's mechanism of action in improving fertility was that it spares progesterone.(9) | |||
It is established that some of the effects of vitamin E and progesterone are similar, for example, both | |||
prevent oxygen waste and appear to improve mitochondrial coupling of phosphorylation with respiration. I | |||
suspected that if they actually both work at the same mitochondrial site, then they must have a high mutual | |||
solubility. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Knowing the long-standing problem of administering large doses of progesterone without a toxic solvent, I | |||
applied for and was granted a patent for the composition of progesterone in tocopherol. One of my reasons | |||
for publishing in the form of patents is that I have had many years of experience in having my discoveries | |||
taken up by others without acknowledgment, if they are compatible with conventional prejudices. Typically, | |||
an editor rejects a paper, and then a few months later publishes a very similar paper by someone else. My | |||
dissertation research, which established that an estrogen excess kills the embryo by suffocation, and that | |||
progesterone protects the embryo by promoting the delivery of both oxygen and glucose, didn't strike a | |||
responsive chord in the journals which are heavily influenced by funds from the drug industry. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
According to a consultant for a major medical journal, the idea ""of dissolving progesterone, a fat soluble | |||
steroid hormone, in vitamin E which is then incorporated into chylomicrons absorbed via the lymphatics, and | |||
thus avoids the liver on the so called first pass" "is so simple it is amazing that the pharmaceutical | |||
companies have not jumped on it." (A more sophisticated writer might have said ""stomped on it.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the powder form, direct and intimate contact with a mucous membrane allows lipid phase to lipid phase | |||
transfer of progesterone molecules. Instead of by-passing the liver, much of the progesterone is picked up | |||
in the portal circulation, where a major part of it is glucuronidated, and made water soluble for prompt | |||
excretion. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since this glucuronide form cross-reacts to some extent with the ordinary progesterone in the assay process, | |||
and since 50% of the ordinary free progesterone is carried inside the red blood cells (10,11), and 50% is | |||
associated with proteins in the plasma, while the glucuronide hardly enters the red blood cells at all, it | |||
is better to judge by clinical efficacy when comparing different oral forms. My comparisons show several | |||
times higher potency in the tocopherol composition than in powder form. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since progesterone's use as a drug antedates the 1938 law requiring special federal approval, its legal | |||
status is similar to that of thyroid hormone. Unfortunately, for both thyroid and progesterone, there is a | |||
tendency to cut corners for the sake of a bigger profit margin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For example, steroid acetates are generally a little cheaper than the simple natural steroid. Some people | |||
assume that an acetate or butyrate can be substituted for the steroid itself. This can cause dangerous | |||
reactions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Medroxyprogesterone acetate is considered a progestin (though it is not supportive of gestation), because it | |||
modifies the uterus in approximately the wasy progesterone does, but it is luteolytic, and lowers the | |||
ovaries' production of progesterone while progesterone itself has a positive effect on the corpus luteum, | |||
stimulating progesterone synthesis. Defining "progestin" in a narrow way allows many synthetics to be sold | |||
as progestogens, though some of them are strongly estrogenic, allowing them to function as | |||
contraceptives--it is odd that contraceptives and agents which suppress progesterone synthesis should be | |||
officially called "supported of pregnancy." It is probably partly the acetate group in the | |||
medroxyprogesterone acetate molecule which makes it bind firmly to receptors, yet causes it to block the | |||
enzymes which would normally be involved in progesterone metabolism. (I think testosterone, even, might be a | |||
safer progestin than medroxyprogesterone acetate.) Pregnenolone acetate similarly blocks the enzymes which | |||
normally metabolize pregnenolone. (12) In aspirin, it has been found that it is the acetyl group which (by a | |||
free radical action) blocks an enzyme involved in prostaglandin synthesis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If the category called "progestogens" or "progestins" is to be defined on the basis of a single tissue | |||
reaction, then it is possible to classify progesterone with the toxic synthetic substances, but then it | |||
becomes highly deceptive to imply that progesterone is <strong><em>just</em></strong> a progestin, or that | |||
it has any of the <strong><em>other properties </em></strong> | |||
of the toxic synthetics, but this continues to be done. The warnings about "progestins causing birth | |||
defects," for example, cause epileptic women t use conventional anti-seizure drugs (all of which cause birth | |||
defects) during pregnancy, and to avoid natural progesterone, which generally could control their seizures. | |||
Thus, a false message attached to progesterone creates precisely the harm it claims to want to prevent. In | |||
my communications with the regulatory agencies, I have concluded that their attempts to deceive are too | |||
blatant to ascribe to incompetence. Whether it's the Forest Service the FDA, the principle is the same: The | |||
regulatory agencies have been captured by the regulated industries. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Another place to cut costs is in the tocopherol. Tocopherol acetate does have vitamin E activity, but sine | |||
it is only about half as efficiently absorbed as the simple tocopherol (13), it is a mistake to save a few | |||
dollars an ounce, at the expense of losing half of the therapeutic effect. People who have compared natural | |||
progesterone in natural tocopherols with other compositions have insisted that the other compositions must | |||
not contain progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The taste of natural vitamin E is stronger than that of the synthetic forms, but since the mixture is | |||
absorbed by any tissue it contacts, including various parts of the bowel, it can be taken in a capsule. If a | |||
small amount of olive oil is used with it, absorption through the skin is very rapid. Many women use it | |||
vaginally, spread onto a diaphragm, to hold it in contact with the membranes. The efficiency of absorption | |||
by all routes is so high that patients should be warned against its anesthetic effect, until their dosage | |||
requirement is known approximately. Some physicians prefer concentrations higher than 10%, but the risk of | |||
accidental drunkenness or anesthesia is higher with the stronger solutions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It is an indication of the tocopherol solution's high availability that medical researchers such as Roy | |||
Hertz (8), who thought they were administering maximal doses by combining injections with suppositories, | |||
never mentioned the problem of an anesthetic effect from an overdose. Similarly, it si evidence of the | |||
extremely poor availability of the micropulverized progesterone that the researchers have administered | |||
hundreds of milligrams per day, without mentioning the symptoms of an overdose. Because of the difficulties | |||
involved in scientifically studying the clinical effectiveness of various formulations, I think the most | |||
practical way of evaluating the effectiveness of different progesterone formulations is to measure the | |||
amount extractable from the red blood cells, a few hours after the peak serum level has been reached. This | |||
will reasonably reflect the amounts reaching brain cells, adrenal glands, and the various other cells on | |||
which progesterone has its therapeutic action. | |||
</p> | |||
<h3>REFERENCES</h3> | |||
<p> | |||
1. A A. Gidley-Baird, et aI., Failure of implantation in human in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer | |||
patients: the effects of altered progesterone/estrogen ratios in humans and mice, Fertility and Sterility | |||
45(1): 69-74, 1986. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
2. J. L. Yovich, et aI., Early luteal serum progesterone concentrations are higher in pregnancy cycles, | |||
Fertility and Sterility 44 (1): 185-189, 1985. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
3. C. Djerassi, The making of the pill, Science 84: 127-129, 1984. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
4. R. Kehl, Les Glandes Endocrines, Presses Universitaires de France, Paris, 1952. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
5. J. A. Grant, et aI., New England Journal of Medicine 306(2): 108, 1982, Unsuspected benzyl alcohol | |||
hypersensitivity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
6. T. E. Feasby, et aI., Neurotoxicity of bacteriostatic water, New England Journal of Medicine 308(6): | |||
966-7, 1983. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
7. E. T. Kimura, et aI., Parenteral toxicity studies with benzyl a1cohol,Toxicol Appl Pharmacol18: 60-68, | |||
1971. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
8. A. White, editor, Symposium on Steroids in Experimental and Clinical Practice, The Blakiston Co., N.Y., | |||
1951, p. 401. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
9. A. Fraschini, II Metodo Biologico di Rinvigorimento, Edizioni Minerva Medica, Milan, 1954. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
10. E. Mulder, et aI., Metabolism of free and conjugated steroids by intact and haemolysed mammalian | |||
erythrocytes, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 263: <em>290-297, </em> | |||
1972. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
11. M. Holzbauer, The association of steroids with blood cells in vivo, J. of Steroid Biochemistry 3: | |||
579-592, 1972. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
12. S. Lieberman, et aI., A heuristic proposal for understanding steroidogenic processes, Endocrine Reviews | |||
5(1): 128-148, 1984. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
13. L. J. Machlin and E. Gabriel, Kinetics of tissue alpha-tocopherol uptake and depletion, following | |||
administration of high levels of | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
vitamin E, p. 48 in annals of the N.Y. Academy of Science 393,B. Lubin and I. J. Machlin, editors, New York, | |||
1982. | |||
</p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2007. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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Progesterone Summaries | |||
</title> | |||
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<h1> | |||
Progesterone Summaries | |||
</h1> | |||
<a name="2"></a> | |||
<p><strong>PROGESTERONE INFORMATION</strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sixty years ago, progesterone was found to be the main hormone produced by the ovaries. Since it was | |||
necessary for fertility and for maintaining a healthy pregnancy, it was called the "pro-gestational | |||
hormone," and its name sometimes leads people to think that it isn't needed when you don't want to get | |||
pregnant. In fact, it is the most protective hormone the body produces, and the large amounts that are | |||
produced during pregnancy result from the developing baby's need for protection from the stressful | |||
environment. Normally, the brain contains a very high concentration of progesterone, reflecting its | |||
protective function for that most important organ. The thymus gland, the key organ of our immune system, is | |||
also profoundly dependent of progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In experiments, progesterone was found to be the basic hormone of adaptation and of resistance to stress. | |||
The adrenal glands use it to produce their antistress hormones, and when there is enough progesterone, they | |||
don't have to produce the potentially harmful cortisol. In a progesterone deficiency, we produce too much | |||
cortisol, and excessive cortisol causes osteoporosis, aging of the skin, damage to brain cells, and the | |||
accumulation of fat, especially on the back and abdomen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Experiments have shown that progesterone relieves anxiety, improves memory, protects brain cells, and even | |||
prevents epileptic seizures. It promotes respiration, and has been used to correct emphysema. In the | |||
circulatory system, it prevents bulging veins by increasing the tone of blood vessels, and improves the | |||
efficiency of the heart. It reverses many of the signs of aging in the skin, and promotes healthy bone | |||
growth. It can relieve many types of arthritis, and helps a variety of immunological problems. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If progesterone is taken dissolved in vitamin E, it is absorbed very efficiently, and distributed quickly to | |||
all of the tissues. If a woman has ovaries, progesterone helps them to regulate themselves and their hormone | |||
production. It helps to restore normal functioning of the thyroid and other glands. If her ovaries have been | |||
removed, progesterone should be taken consistently to replace the lost supply. A progesterone deficiency has | |||
often been associated with increased susceptibility to cancer, and progesterone has been used to treat some | |||
types of cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It is important to emphasize that progesterone is not just the hormone of pregnancy. To use it only "to | |||
protect the uterus" would be like telling a man he doesn't need testosterone if he doesn't plan to father | |||
children, except that progesterone is of far greater and more basic physiological significance than | |||
testosterone. While men do naturally produce progesterone, and can sometimes benefit from using it, it is | |||
not a male hormone. Some people get that impression, because some physicians recommend combining estrogen | |||
with either testosterone or progesterone, to protect against some of estrogen's side effects, but | |||
progesterone is the body's natural complement to estrogen. Used alone, progesterone often makes it | |||
unnecessary to use estrogen for hot flashes or insomnia, or other symptoms of menopause. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When dissolved in vitamin E, progesterone begins entering the blood stream almost as soon as it contacts any | |||
membrane, such as the lips, tongue, gums, or palate, but when it is swallowed, it continues to be absorbed | |||
as part of the digestive process. When taken with food, its absorption occurs at the same rate as the | |||
digestion and absorption of the food. | |||
</p> | |||
<a name="3"></a> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>PROGESTERONE SUPPLEMENTATION </strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
SYMPTOMATIC: For tendonitis, bursitis, arthritis, sunburn, etc., progesterone in vitamin E can be applied | |||
locally after a little olive oil has been put on the skin to make it easier to spread the progesterone | |||
solution. For migraines, it has been taken orally just as the symptoms begin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
FOR PMS: The normal pattern of progesterone secretion during the month is for the ovaries to produce a large | |||
amount in the 2<sup>nd</sup> two weeks of the menstrual cycle, (i.e., day 14 through day 28) beginning at | |||
ovulation and ending around the beginning of menstruation, and then to produce little for the following two | |||
weeks. An average person produces about 30 milligrams daily during the 2<sup>nd</sup> two weeks. The | |||
solution I have used contains approximately 3 or 4 milligrams of progesterone per small drop. Three to four | |||
drops, or about 10 to 15 milligrams of progesterone, is often enough to bring the progesterone level up to | |||
normal. That amount can be taken days 14 through 28 of the menstrual cycle; this amount may be repeated once | |||
or twice during the day as needed to alleviate symptoms. Since an essential mechanism of progesterone's | |||
action involves its opposition to estrogen, smaller amounts are effective when estrogen production is low, | |||
and if estrogen is extremely high, even large supplements of progesterone will have no clear effect; in that | |||
case, it is essential to regulate estrogen metabolism, by improving the diet, correcting a thyroid | |||
deficiency, etc. (Unsaturated fat is antithyroid and synergizes with estrogen.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
PERIMENOPAUSAL: The symptoms and body changes leading up to menopause are associated with decreasing | |||
production of progesterone, at a time when estrogen may be at a lifetime high. The cyclic use of | |||
progesterone, two weeks on, two weeks off, will often keep the normal menstrual cycle going. Three to our | |||
drops, providing ten or twelve milligrams of progesterone, is typical for a day, but some women prefer to | |||
repeat that amount. Progesterone is always more effective when the diet contains adequate protein, and when | |||
thee isn't an excessive amount of unsaturated fat in the diet.. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
POSTMENOPAUSAL: Some women continue the cyclic use of progesterone ater menopause, because the pituitary | |||
gland and brain may continue to cycle long after menstruation has stopped, and progesterone is an important | |||
regulator of pituitary and brain function. The cycling pituitary affects the adrenal glands and other | |||
organs, and progesterone tends to protect against the unopposed actions of prolactin, cortisol, and adrenal | |||
androgenic hormones. Progesterone's effects on the pituitary apparently contribute to its protective effect | |||
against osteoporosis, hypertension, hirsutism, etc. But some women prefer to use progesterone without | |||
interruption after the menopause, for its protective antistress effects. Slender people usually find that | |||
two or three drops are enough, but this amount may be repeated once or twice as needed to relieve symptoms. | |||
Adequate protein in the diet and good thyroid function help the body to produce its own progesterone; even | |||
if the ovaries have been removed, the adrenal glands and brain continue to produce progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<a name="4"></a> | |||
<strong>DOSAGE OF PROGESTERONE</strong> | |||
<p> | |||
Since progesterone has none of the harmful side effects of other hormones (except for alteration of the | |||
menstrual cycle if it is taken at the wrong time of month), the basic procedure should be to use it in | |||
sufficient quantity to make the symptoms disappear, and to time its use so that menstrual cycles are not | |||
disrupted. This normally means using it only between ovulation and menstruation unless symptoms are | |||
sufficiently serious that a missed period is not important. The basic idea of giving enough to stop the | |||
symptoms can be refined by some information on a few of the factors that condition the need for | |||
progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If a person has an enlarged thyroid gland, progesterone promotes secretion and unloading of the stored | |||
"colloid," and can bring on a temporary hyperthyroid state. This is a corrective process, and in itself | |||
isn't harmful. A thyroid supplement should be used to shrink the goiter before progesterone is given. Normal | |||
amounts of progesterone facilitate thyroid secretion, while a deficiency, with unopposed estrogen, causes | |||
the thyroid to enlarge. The production of euphoria has been mentioned as a side effect, but I think euphoria | |||
is simply an indication of a good physiological state. (The history of official medical attitudes toward | |||
euphoria is a subject that deserves more attention.) Very large doses that are given in vitamin E solution, | |||
allowing complete absorption, can reach the level that is sometimes achieved late in pregnancy, producing | |||
both euphoria and a degree of anesthesis. To avoid unexpected anesthesia, the correct dose should be | |||
determined by taking about 10 mg. at a time allowing it to spread into the membranes of the mouth, and | |||
repeating the dose after 10 minutes until the symptoms are controlled. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
An excessive estrogen/progesterone ratio is more generally involved in producing or aggravating symptoms | |||
than either a simple excess of estrogen or a deficiency of progesterone, but even this ratio is conditioned | |||
by other factors, including age, diet, other steroids, thyroid, and other hormones. The relative estrogen | |||
excess seems to act by producing tissue hypoxia (as reported in my dissertation, University of Oregon, | |||
1972), and this is the result of changes induced by estrogen in alveolar diffusion, peripheral vascular | |||
changes, and intracellular oxygen wastage. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hypoxia in turn produces edema (as can be observed in the cornea when it is deprived of oxygen, as by a | |||
contact lens) and hypoglycemia (e.g., diminished ATP acts like insulin), because glycolysis must increase | |||
greatly for even a small deficiency of oxygen. Elevated blood lactic acid is one sign of tissue hypoxia. | |||
Edema, hypoglycemia, and lactic academia can also be produced by other "respiratory" defects, including | |||
hypothyroidism, in which the tissue does not use enough oxygen. In hypoxia, the skin will be bluer (in thin | |||
places, such as around the eyes), than when low oxygen consumption is the main problem. Low thyroid is one | |||
cause of excess estrogen, and when high estrogen is combined with low thyroid, the skin looks relatively | |||
bloodless. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Symptoms in cycling women are most common around ovulation and in the premenstrual week, when the | |||
estrogen/progesterone ratio is normally highest. At puberty, in the early twenties and in the late thirties | |||
and menopause are the ages when the ratio is most often disturbed--and these are also the ages when thyroid | |||
disorders are commonest in women. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The individual who suffers from one aspect of the progesterone (and/or thyroid) deficiency will tend to | |||
develop other problems at different times. With cyclic depressions or migraine headaches at age 22, there | |||
will possibly be breast disease later, and often there will be problems with pregnancy. These people with a | |||
history of sever symptoms are the ones most likely to have severe problems around menopause. Prenatal | |||
exposure to poorly balanced hormones seems to predispose the child to later hormone problems. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Excess stress (which can block progesterone synthesis and elevate estrogen) may bring on symptoms in someone | |||
who never had them. Spending a summer in Alaska, with an unusually long day, may relieve the symptoms of a | |||
chronic sufferer. Dark cloudy winters in England or the Pacific Northwest are powerful stressors, and cause | |||
lower production of progesterone in women, and testosterone in men. Toxins can produce similar symptoms, as | |||
can nutritional deficiencies. A very common cause of an estrogen excess is a dietary protein deficiency--the | |||
liver simply cannot detoxify estrogen when it is under-nourished. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
With a diet high in protein (e.g., at least 70-100 grams per day, including eggs) and vitamin A (not | |||
carotene), I have found that the dose of progesterone can be reduced each month. Using thyroid will usually | |||
reduce the amount of progesterone needed. Occasionally, a woman won't feel any effect even from 100 mg. of | |||
progesterone; I think this indicates that they need to use thyroid and diet, to normalize their estrogen, | |||
prolactin, and cortisol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Progesterone stimulates the ovaries and adrenals to produce progesterone, and it also activates the thyroid, | |||
so one dose can sometimes have prolonged effects. It shouldn't be necessary to keep using progesterone | |||
indefinitely, unless the ovaries have been removed. In slender post-menopausal women, 10 mg. per day is | |||
usually enough to prevent progesterone deficiency symptoms. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In a 10% solution of progesterone in vitamin E, one drop contains about three milligrams of progesterone. | |||
Normally, the body produces 10 to 20 milligrams per day. A dose of 3 or 4 drops usually brings the blood | |||
levels up to the normal range, but this dose can be repeated several times during the day if it is needed to | |||
control symptoms. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For general purposes, it is most economical and effective to take progesterone dissolved in vitamin E | |||
orally, for example taking a few drops on the lips and tongue, or rubbing it into the gums. (It is good for | |||
the general health of the gums.) These membranes are very thin, and the progesterone quickly enters the | |||
blood. When it is swallowed, the vitamin E allows it to be absorbed through the walls of the stomach and | |||
intestine, and it can be assimilated along with food, in the chylomicrons, permitting it to circulate in the | |||
blood to all of the organs before being processed by the liver. These droplets are smaller than red blood | |||
cells, and some physicians seem to forget that red blood cells pass freely through the liver. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For the topical treatment of sun damaged skin, or acne, wrinkles, etc. the oil can be applied directly to | |||
the affected area. | |||
</p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2007. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<p></p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>"...simultaneous treatment of intact...rats with testosterone and estradiol-17beta for 16 weeks | |||
consistenly induced a putative precancerous lesion, termed dysplasia, in the dorsolateral prostate of | |||
all animals. Since treatment of rats with androgen alone did not elicit the same response, we | |||
concluded that estrogen played a critical role in the genesis of this proliferative | |||
lesion." <span>Shuk-mei Ho and M. Yu, in "Selective increase in | |||
type II estrogen-binding sites in the dysplastic dorsolateral prostates of Noble rats," Cancer | |||
Research 53, 528-532, 1993.</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p><span><hr /></span></p> | |||
<h1>Prostate Cancer</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
It was noticed several decades ago that estrogen causes the prostate gland to enlarge in experimental | |||
animals, but by then an oversimplified view of the sex hormones was already well established, that led | |||
people to say that "estrogen causes the female organs to grow, and testosterone causes the male organs to | |||
grow." Logically extending this mistaken idea led many of the same people to suppose that the | |||
"hormones of one sex would inhibit the growth of the reproductive organs of the other sex." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When a friend of mine was told he had prostate cancer, though he had had no symptoms, and should receive | |||
large doses of estrogen, I reviewed the literature, to see whether his doctor might have seen something I | |||
had neglected. Since that time, I have found it necessary to use quotation marks around the phrases | |||
"medical research" and "medical science," because there is a certain kind of "research" performed within the | |||
medical profession which is peculiar to that profession. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When I read through the studies cited by the current articles as the basis for using estrogen to treat | |||
prostate cancer, I saw that the decisive "research" had consisted of mailing a questionnaire to physicians | |||
asking them if they thought it was reasonable to administer estrogen to these patients on the basis of its | |||
opposition to testosterone, which was considered to be responsible for the growth of the prostate | |||
gland. Many physicians answered the questionnaire affirmatively. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If the questioner's purpose was to determine his legal status in using a treatment, his research method was | |||
appropriate, to see whether the treatment seemed reasonable to others in the profession. Legally, a | |||
physician is safe if he can count on others to testify that his practice is standard. Unfortunately, | |||
for generations his study of the opinions of his peers became the "evidence" of the value of the estrogen | |||
treatment. Phrases such as "it is indicated," "treatment of choice," and "standard practice" are used | |||
in medicine, as part of the pseudo-scientific mystique of the profession. Physicans who attempt to | |||
base their practice on methods that have a sound scientific basis are likely to find that they are violating | |||
the norms of their profession. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
More than 25 years ago, when I started pointing out that deliberate misrepresentation had been involved in | |||
the continued designation of estrogen as "the female hormone," used as a basis for "hormone replacement | |||
therapies," I saw that it was hard for people to sustain a critical attitude toward language. Language | |||
is prior to judgment, law, science, reason. Those who define the terms set the rules. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By the mid-1980s, some studies had shown that estrogen treatment didn't prolong the survival of prostate | |||
cancer patients at all, but it was argued that the patients who received estrogen were happier than those | |||
who didn't. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Apparently, many physicians who were experts in conventional cancer treatment hadn't been impressed by the | |||
happiness of their patients who were receiving estrogen, because a survey at a conference of physicians | |||
found that many of them would choose to have no treatment if they learned they had prostate cancer. | |||
And more recently, there have been recommendations that older patients shouldn't be treated aggressively, | |||
because their cancers are usually so slow growing that they are likely to die of something else related to | |||
old age. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In spite of the articles I showed my friend, and my warning that estrogen can cause strokes and heart | |||
attacks, he decided to take the estrogen treatment. Within a few days he began suffering from asthma | |||
and disturbed sleep. Then he had a series of strokes and died. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since it was known that estrogen treatment was dangerous for men, and that it increases blood clotting and | |||
vascular spasms, there had to be some overriding belief that led to its general use in treating prostate | |||
cancer. That belief seems to be that "estrogen, the female hormone, opposes testosterone, the male | |||
hormone, which is responsible for the growth--and therefore for the cancerization--of the prostate | |||
gland." Everything is wrong with that sentence, but you can find every part of the belief present and | |||
functioning in the medical literature. Just to give some context to the association of growth and | |||
cancerization, I should mention that Otto Warburg observed that all of the carcinogenic factors he studied | |||
caused <span>tissue atrophy before cancer</span> appeared. Another important contextual | |||
point is that every hormone does <span>many </span>things, and every endocrine gland produces | |||
multiple hormones. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since the time of Brown-Sequard and Eugen Steinach, it has been accepted that declining testicular function | |||
is a common feature of aging, and testosterone was probably the first hormone that was clearly found to | |||
decrease consistently with aging. (Vermeulen, et al., 1972, 1979.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It has seemed odd to many people that enlargement of the prostate should occur mainly in older men, if | |||
testosterone is the hormone that causes its growth, and estrogen is antagonistic to its growth. The | |||
nature of the growth of the old man's prostate is very different from its natural growth in youth. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It was also recognized decades ago that estrogen rises in men during old age (Pirke and Doerr, 1975), as it | |||
rises in stress, disease, malnutrition, and hypothyroidism (which are also associated with old age). | |||
Estrogen is produced in fat (Siiteri, and MacDonald, 1973, Vermeulen, 1976) which tends to increase with | |||
age, when thyroid and progesterone are deficient. The conversion of testosterone to estrogen occurs in | |||
the testicle itself, but this conversion is also inhibited by the favorable hormonal environment of | |||
youth.<span> </span>The active thyroid hormone, T<sub>3</sub> | |||
<span><sub>, </sub></span>declines with aging, and this necessarily lowers production of pregnenolone | |||
and progesterone. Increasingly, in both sexes, it appears that DHEA may rise during stress as a result | |||
of a deficiency of thyroid, progesterone, and pregnenolone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 1786, John Hunter reported that castration causes a decrease in the size of the prostate gland, and by | |||
the end of the 19th century castration was being advocated for treating enlargement of the prostate. | |||
In aging men, the prostate gland (both central and peripheral zones) atrophies, and it is within the | |||
atrophic gland that cancer cells can be found. Nodular, noncancerous enlargement may occur, with or | |||
without cancer. In 1935, an autopsy study showed carcinoma in the prostates of 30% of men by the age | |||
of 50. Proliferation of ductal and epithelial tissue is closely associated with prostate cancer, a | |||
situation similar to that of the cancerous or precancerous breast. (Simpson, et al., 1982; Wellings, | |||
et al., 1975; Jensen, et al., 1976.) The high probability of "epitheliosis" in association with cancer | |||
was seen in women in their early 40s, and in women over 60. (Simpson, et al.) (Epitheliosis just | |||
refers to an exaggerated proliferation of epithelial cells, the cells covering all surfaces, including the | |||
lining of glands, and things as simple as irritation and vitamin A deficiency can cause these cells to | |||
proliferate.) In the breast, the proliferative epitheliosis is clearly caused by estrogenic | |||
stimulation. The antagonism between estrogen and vitamin A in controlling epithelial proliferation | |||
(and possibly other cell types<span>:</span> Boettger-Tong and Stancel, 1995) is clear wherever it has | |||
been tested<span>;</span> vitamin A restrains epithelial proliferation. (Wherever estrogen is a | |||
factor in the development of abnormal tissue, vitamin A supplementation would seem beneficial.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span> </span>In aging women and men, as the breasts and prostate atrophy, their estrogen/antiestrogen | |||
ratio increases. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In men with prostate cancer, the fluid secreted by the prostate contains significantly more estradiol than | |||
the fluid from men without cancer (Rose, et al., 1984). This is analogous to observations made in | |||
women with breast cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The pituitary hormones have diverse functons, including effects on epithelial tissues, other than their | |||
"classical" functions. Growth hormone, ACTH (Lostroh and Li, 1957), and ACTH with prolactin (Tullner, | |||
1963) stimulate prostate growth. Prolactin--which is increased by estrogen--stimulates growth of the | |||
rat's lateral prostate (Holland and Lee, 1980), and stimulates the growth of human prostate epithelial | |||
cells <span>in vitro</span> (Syms, et al., 1985). LH (luteinizing hormone) increases when | |||
progesterone or testosterone is deficient, and growth hormone and prolactin (which are closely associated in | |||
evolution) both increase under a variety of stressful situations, and with estrogenic | |||
stimulation. <span>Prostate cancer patients who had higher levels of LH and </span> | |||
<span>lower testosterone</span> | |||
<span> died most quickly. (Harper, et al., 1984.) Also, a </span> | |||
<span>high ratio of testosterone to estradiol or of testosterone to prolactin</span> | |||
<span> corresponded to better survival (Rannikko, et al., 1981.) Considered separately, patients | |||
with </span> | |||
<span>higher testosterone levels had a better prognosis</span> | |||
<span> than those with lower levels, and patients with lower growth hormone </span>levels did | |||
better than those with higher growth hormone levels. (Wilson, et al., 1985.) Has anyone ever tried | |||
testosterone therapy for prostate cancer? Or, more practically, a generalized antiestrogenic therapy, | |||
using thyroid, progesterone, and pregnenolone? Other drugs (naloxone, bromocriptine, | |||
gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists, and anti-growth hormone druges, e.g.) are available to regulate the | |||
pituitary hormones, and might be useful therapeutically or preventively. (See Blaakaer, et al., | |||
1995.) Biskind and Biskind's work (1944) with ovarian tumors might be relevant to both testicular and | |||
prostate cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Abnormal patterns of pituitary hormones reflect stress and hormonal imbalance, but they are also directly | |||
involved in widespread changes in tissue content of glycoproteins. The prostate is specialized to | |||
secrete large amounts of mucin. The endocrine physiology of prostate mucin secretion is poorly | |||
understood, but it is likely that there are interactions between growth-regulatory and secretion-regulatory | |||
systems. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In recent years, prostate cancer has been one of the fastest increasing kinds of cancer, and it isn't | |||
apparent that increased treatment has had an effect in lowering the death rate. The postwar baby-boom | |||
(following the baby-bust of the great depression) created an abnormal age-structure of the population, that | |||
has been used to argue that the war against cancer is being won. Increasing environmental estrogens | |||
are known to cause many reproductive abnormalities, and their contribution to prostate cancer would get more | |||
attention if estrogen's role in prostate disease were better known. Environmental estrogens are | |||
clearly responsible for genital deformities and sterility in many species of wild animals, but when the | |||
causal link is made between estrogens and human abnormalities, the estrogen industry sends its shills in to | |||
create controversy and confusion. Even the effects of estrogens in sewage, known for decades, are | |||
treated as State Secrets: "There had been reports of hermaphroditic fishes in one or two rivers, and | |||
government investigators had been studying them since the late 1970s. <span>But no one had been | |||
aware of the work because it was classified."</span> (Lutz, 1996.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Testicular cancer is easy to diagnose, and its incidence has clearly increased (100% in white men, 200% in | |||
black men) since 1950. Undescended testicles, urethral abnormalities, etc., similar to those seen in | |||
DES sons and in wild animals, have also increased. So the tremendous increase in the death rate from | |||
prostate cancer during the same time has a meaningful context. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although the animal studies showed that estrogen treatment promotes enlargement of the prostate, it was | |||
possible to suppose that the human prostate's growth might be stimulated only by testosterone, until tests | |||
were done <span>in vitro</span> to determine the effects of hormones on cell division. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In human prostate slices, several hormones (including insulin, and probably prolactin) stimulated cell | |||
division<span>;</span> <span>testosterone did not,</span> under these experimental conditions. | |||
(McKeehan, et al., 1984.) Contrary to the stereotyped ideas, there are suggestions that supplementary | |||
androgens could control prostate cancer (Umekita, et al., 1996), and that antagonists to prolactin and | |||
estrogen might be appropriately used in hormonal therapy (for example, Wennbo, et al., 1997; Lane, et al., | |||
1997). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By the age of 50, men often show an excess of both prolactin and estrogen, and a deficiency of thyroid and | |||
testosterone. This is the age at which enlargement of the prostate often becomes noticeable. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen's role in prostate growth and cancerization is clear<span>:</span> "<span>...</span | |||
>simultaneous treatment of intact...rats with testosterone and estradiol-17beta for 16 weeks consistenly | |||
induced a putative precancerous lesion, termed dysplasia, in the dorsolateral prostate of all animals. | |||
Since treatment of rats with androgen alone did not elicit the same response, we concluded that estrogen | |||
played a critical role in the genesis of this proliferative lesion." (Ho and Yu.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Progesterone and pregnenolone also decline in aging men. Several studies using synthetic progestins | |||
have shown that they effectively shrink the hypertrophic prostate, and the saw palmetto remedy for prostate | |||
enlargement has been reported to contain pregnenolone, or something similar to it. These materials | |||
might be expected to reduce conversion of testosterone or other androgens to estrogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The prostaglandins were discovered in prostatic fluid, where they occur in significant concentrations. | |||
They are so deeply involved with the development of cancers of all sorts that aspirin and other | |||
prostaglandin inhibitors should be considered as a basic part of cancer therapy. The prostaglandins | |||
have local and systemic effects that promote cancer growth. ("The prostaglandins and related | |||
eicosanoids synthesized from polyunsaturated fatty acid precursors have been implicated as modulators | |||
of <span>tumor metastasis, host immunoregulation, tumor promotion, and cell proliferation."</span | |||
> Hubbard, et al., 1988.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogens cause elevation of free fatty acids, and there are many interactions between the unsaturated | |||
fatty acids and estrogen, including their metabolism to prostaglandins, and their peroxidation. | |||
Estrogen's roles as free-radical promoter, DNA toxin, carcinogen, tumor promotor, modifier of tissue growth | |||
factors, anti-thymic hormone, etc., as well as its local effects on the prostate gland, have to be kept in | |||
mind. Most of the interest in studying estrogen's contributions to prostate cancer relates to the | |||
existence of estrogen receptors in various parts of the prostate. While that is interesting, it tends | |||
to distract attention from the fact that many of estrogen's most important actions don't involve the | |||
"receptors." A <span>direct excitatory</span> action on prostate cells, and <span | |||
>indirect</span> actions by way of the pituitary, pancreas, thyroid, adrenal, fatty acids, | |||
prostaglandins, histamine and circulation are probably essential parts of the cancerization process. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The unsaturated fatty acids, but not the saturated fatty acids, free estrogen from the serum proteins that | |||
bind it, and increase its availability and activity in tissue cells. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Thyroid supplementation, adequate animal protein, trace minerals, and vitamin A are the first things to | |||
consider in the prevention of prostate hypertrophy and cancer. Nutritional and endocrine support can | |||
be combined with rational anticancer treatments, since there is really no sharp line between different | |||
approaches that are aimed at achieving endocrine and immunological balance, without harming anything. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Avoiding tissue atrophy is very closely related to promoting healthy regeneration. These processes | |||
require efficient energy production, and an appropriate balance between stimulation and resources. | |||
Growth hormone is sometimes recommend to correct tissue atrophy, but the evidence seems reasonably clear | |||
that it is a factor in the promotion of tumefaction of the prostate. The only study I have seen | |||
suggesting that it might be beneficial in prostatic cancer was a 14 day experiment done in female | |||
rats. Numerous publications suggest that blocking growth hormone is beneficial in treating prostate | |||
cancer<span>; </span>in future newsletters I will be discussing the evidence that growth hormone, like | |||
estrogen, cortisol, and unsaturated fats, tends to promote degenerative changes of aging - <a | |||
href="http://raypeat.com/articles/articles/growth-hormone.shtml" | |||
>Growth hormone: Hormone of Stress, Aging, and Death?</a> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
<p> <span><h3>REFERENCES</h3></span></p> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>M.C. Audy, et al., "17beta-Estradiol stimulates a rapid Ca2+ influx in LNCaP human prostate cancer | |||
cells," Eur. J. Endocrionol.135, 367-373, 1996.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>M. S. Biskind and G. S. Biskind, "Development of tumors in the rat ovary after transplantation into | |||
the spleen," Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. 55, 176-179, 1944.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>J. Blaakaer, et al., "Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist suppression of ovarian tumorigenesis in | |||
mice of the W<sup>x</sup>/W<sup>v</sup> genotype," Biol. of Reprod. 53, 775-779, 1995.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Clinton, SK Mulloy AL, Li SP, Mangian HJ, Visek WJ, J Nutr 1997 Feb;127(2):225-237 "Dietary fat and | |||
protein intake differ in modulation of prostate tumor growth, prolactin secretion and metabolism, and | |||
prostate gland prolactin binding capacity in rats." </span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>J. R. Drago, "The induction of Nb rat prostatic carcinomas," Anticancer Res. 4, 255-256, 1984.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>J. Geller, et al., "The effect of cyproterone acetate on adenocarcinoma of the prostate," Surg. Gynec. | |||
Obst. 127, 748-758, 1968.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>J. Geller, J. Fishman, and T. L. Cantor, "Effect of cyproterone acetate on clinical, endocrine and | |||
pathological features of benign prostatic hypertrophy," J. Steroid Biochemistry 6, 837-843, 1975.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Ho, Shuk-mei, and M. Yu, "Selective increase in type II estrogen-binding sites in the dysplastic | |||
dorsolateral prostates of Noble rats," Cancer Research 53, 528-532, 1993. "...simultaneous | |||
treatment of intact...rats with testosterone and estradiol-17beta for 16 weeks consistenly induced a | |||
putative precancerous lesion, termed dysplasia, in the dorsolateral prostate of all animals. Since | |||
treatment of rats with androgen alone did not elicit the same response, we concluded that estrogen | |||
played a critical role in the genesis of this proliferative lesion."</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>M. E. Harper, et al., "Carcinoma of the prostate: relationship of pretreatment hormone levels to | |||
survival," Eur. J. Cancer Clin. Oncol. 20, 477-482, 1984.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>J. M. Holland and C. Lee, "Effects of pituitary grafts on testosterone stimulated growth of rat | |||
prostate," Biol. Reprod. 22, 351-355, 1980.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>W. C. Hubbard, et al., "Profiles of prostaglandin biosynthesis in sixteen established cell lines | |||
derived from human lung, colon, prostate, and ovarian tumors," Cancer Research 48, 4770-4775, | |||
1988. "The prostaglandins and related eicosanoids synthesized from polyunsaturated fatty acid | |||
precursors have been implicated as modulators of tumor metastasis, host immunoregulation, tumor | |||
promotion, and cell proliferation."</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Izes JK, Zinman LN, Larsen CR, Urology 1996 May;47(5):756-759 "Regression of large pelvic desmoid | |||
tumor by tamoxifen and sulindac," "A 54-year-old man was evaluated for symptoms of bladder outlet | |||
obstruction. Evaluation revealed a 10 by 9.8-cm tumor composed of bland, fibroblastic, poorly cellular | |||
material adjacent to the prostate. Administration of a course of <span>antiestrogen (tamoxifen) and | |||
a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent (sulindac) resulted in prompt relief of symptoms and a slow | |||
decrease in the size of the tumor</span><span> as measured by computed tomography. After 54 | |||
months of therapy, the tumor was undetectable clinically and dramatically reduced in size as seen on | |||
computed tomography. Data on the natural history of desmoid tumors and the efficacy of various | |||
therapeutic strategies are reviewed.</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Jungwirth A, Schally AV, Pinski J, Halmos G, Groot K, Armatis P, Vadillo-Buenfil M., Br J Cancer | |||
1997;75(11):1585-1592, "Inhibition of in vivo proliferation of androgen-independent prostate cancers by | |||
an antagonist of growth hormone-releasing hormone."</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Kroes R; Teppema JS Development and restitution of squamous metaplasia in the calf prostate after a | |||
single estrogen treatment. An electron microscopic study. Mol Pathol, 1972 Jun, 16:3, | |||
286-301.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Lane KE, Leav I, Ziar J, Bridges RS, Rand WM, Ho SM, Carcinogenesis 1997 Aug;18(8):1505-1510 | |||
"Suppression of testosterone and estradiol-17beta-induced dysplasia in the dorsolateral prostate of | |||
Noble rats by bromocriptine." "We, and others, have previously described the histological changes that | |||
occur in the prostate gland of intact Noble (NBL) rats following prolonged hormonal treatment. | |||
Dysplasia, a pre-neoplastic lesion, develops specifically in the dorsolateral prostates (DLPs) of NBL | |||
rats treated for 16 weeks with a combined regimen of testosterone (T) and estradiol-17beta (E2) (T + | |||
E2-treated rats). </span> | |||
<span>Concurrent with DLP dysplasia induction, the dual hormone regimen also elicits hyperprolactinemia, in | |||
addition to an elevation of nuclear type II estrogen binding sites (type II EBS), no alteration in | |||
estrogen receptors (ER), and marked epithelial cell proliferation in the dysplastic foci.</span> | |||
<span> The aim of this study was to investigate whether the dual hormone action is mediated via | |||
E2-induced hyperprolactinemia. Bromocriptine (Br), at a dose of 4 mg/kg body wt per day, was used to | |||
suppress pituitary prolactin (PRL) release. Serum PRL levels were lowered from values of 341 +/- 50 | |||
ng/ml in T + E2-treated rats to 32 +/- 10 ng/ml in Br co-treated animals. The latter values were | |||
comparable to those in untreated control rats. In addition, Br co-treatment effectively inhibited the | |||
evolution of dysplasia (six out of eight rats) </span> | |||
<span>and the often associated inflammation</span> | |||
<span> (five out of eight rats) in most animals. In contrast, Br co-treatment did not suppress the T + | |||
E2-induced type II EBS elevation nor alter ER levels in the DLPs of these rats, when compared with T + | |||
E2-treated rats. These data extend the many previous studies that have detailed marked influences | |||
of </span> | |||
<span>PRL on rat prostatic functions. However, the current study is the first to implicate PRL in prostatic | |||
dysplasia induction in vivo.</span> | |||
<span>"</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>I. Leav, et al., "Biopotentiality of response to sex hormones by the prostate of castrated or | |||
hypophysectomized dogs: Direct effects of estrogen," Am. J. Pathol., 93, 69-92, 1978.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>H. C. Levine, et al., "Effects of the addition of estrogen to medical castration on prostatic size, | |||
symptoms, histology and serum prostate specific antigen in 4 men with benign prostatic hypertrophy<span | |||
>," J. Urol. 146, 790-93, 1991.</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p><span>Diana Lutz, The Sciences, January/February 1996.</span></p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>W. L. McKeehan, et al., "Direct mitogenic effects of insulin, epidermal growth factor, glucocorticoid, | |||
cholera toxin, unknown pituitary factors and possibly prolactin,<span>but not androgen,</span><span | |||
> on normal rat prostate epithelial cells in serum-free, primary cell culture," Cancer Res. 44(5), | |||
1998-2010, 1984.</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Nevalainen MT, Valve EM, Ingleton PM, Nurmi M, Martikainen PM, Harkonen PL, J Clin Invest 1997 Feb | |||
15;99(4):618-627 "Prolactin and prolactin receptors are expressed and functioning in human prostate." | |||
"The highest density of prolactin receptors was detected in the secretory epithelial cells by | |||
immunohistochemistry. Finally, we report that prolactin is locally produced in human prostate | |||
epithelium, as evidenced by marked prolactin immunoreactivity in a significant portion of prostate | |||
epithelial cells, with parallel expression of prolactin mRNA in human prostate. Collectively, these data | |||
provide significant support for the existence of an autocrine/paracrine loop of prolactin in the human | |||
prostate and may shed new light on the involvement of prolactin in the etiology and progression of | |||
neoplastic growth of the prostate."</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>A. J. Lostroh and C. H. Li, "Stimulation of the sex accessories of hypophysectomised male rat by | |||
non-gonadotrophin hormones of the pituitary gland," Acta endocr. Copenh. 25, 1-16, 1957.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>F. B. Merk, et al., "Multiple phenotypes of prostatic glandular cells in castrated dogs after | |||
individual or combined treatment with androgen<span> </span><span>and estrogen,"</span><span | |||
> Lab. Invest. 54, 42-46, 1986.</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Pirke, K.M. and P. Doerr, "Age related changes in free plasma testosterone, dihydrotesterone, and | |||
oestradiol," Acta endocr. Copenh. 89, 171-178, 1975</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>S. Rannikko, et al., "Hormonal patterns in prostatic cancer 1. Correlation with local extent of | |||
tumour, presence of metastases and grade of differentiation," Acta endocr. Copenh. 98, 625-633, | |||
1981.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>P. H. Rolland, et al., "Prostaglandins in human breast cancer: Evidence suggesting that an | |||
elevated prostaglandin production is a marker of metastatic potential for neoplastic cells," J. Natl. | |||
Cancer Inst. 64, 1061-1070, 1980.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>D. P. Rose, et al., "Hormone levels in prostatic fluid from healthy Finns and prostate cancer | |||
patients," Eur. J. Cancer clin. Oncol. 20, 1317-1319, 1984.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>L. M. Schuman, et al., "Epidemiologic study of prostatic cancer: Preliminary report," Cancer | |||
Treat. Rep. 61, 181-186, 1977.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Siiteri, P.K. and P. C. MacDonald, "Role of extraglandular estrogen in human endocrinology," In | |||
Handbook of Physiology, section 7, Endocrinology Vol II (Eds. S. R. Geiger, et al.,) pp. 615-629, | |||
Williams & Wilkins, Baltimore.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>H. W. Simpson, et al., "Bimodal age-frequency distribution of epitheliosis in cancer mastectomies, | |||
Cancer 50, 2417-2422, 1982; S. R. Wellings, et al., "Atlas of subgross pathology of the human breast | |||
with special reference to possible precancerous lesions," J. Nat. Cancer Inst. 55, 231-273, 1975; H. M. | |||
Jensen, et al., "Preneoplastic lesions in the human breast," Science, N.Y. 191, 295-297,1976.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Sugimura Y, Sakurai M, Hayashi N, Yamashita A, Kawamura J., Prostate 1994;24(1):24-32 | |||
"Age-related changes of the prostate gland in the senescence-accelerated mouse." "Wet weight and numbers | |||
of ductal tips in ventral and dorsolateral prostate glands in senescence accelerated-prone (SA-P) mice | |||
were significantly smaller than those of senescence accelerated-resistant (SA-R) mice, although the | |||
changes of patterns of gross ductal morphology were virtually identical in these groups. <span>High | |||
incidence of stromal hyperplasia with fibrosis and inflammation</span><span> was observed...." | |||
"These data suggest that the aging process occurs heterogeneously within the prostate gland, and | |||
that SA-P mice may be an important model for the study of age-related changes in the prostate | |||
gland."</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>W. W. Tullner, "Hormonal factors in the adrenal-dependent growth of the rat ventral prostate," Nat. | |||
Cancer Inst. Monograph 12, 211-223, 1963.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Umekita Y, Hiipakka RA, Kokontis JM, Liao S, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1996 Oct | |||
15;93(21):11802-11807 "Human prostate tumor growth in athymic mice: inhibition by androgens and | |||
stimulation by finasteride," "When the human prostate cancer cell line, LNCaP 104-S, the growth of which | |||
is stimulated by physiological levels of androgen, is cultured in androgen-depleted medium for > 100 | |||
passages, the cells, now called LNCaP 104-R2, are proliferatively repressed by low concentrations of | |||
androgens. LNCaP 104-R2 cells formed tumors in castrated male athymic nude mice. <span>Testosterone | |||
propionate (TP) treatment prevented LNCaP 104-R2 tumor growth and caused regression of established | |||
tumors in these mice.</span><span> Such a tumor-suppressive effect was not observed with tumors | |||
derived from LNCaP 104-S cells or androgen receptor-negative human prostate cancer PC-3 cells. 5 | |||
alpha-Dihydrotestosterone, </span><span>but not 5 beta-dihydrotesto- sterone, 17 | |||
beta-estradiol,</span><span> or medroxyprogesterone acetate, also inhibited LNCaP 104-R2 tumor | |||
growth. Removal of TP or implantation of finasteride, a 5 alpha-reductase inhibitor, in nude mice | |||
bearing TP implants resulted in the regrowth of LNCaP 104-R2 tumors. Within 1 week after TP | |||
implantation, LNCaP 104-R2 tumors exhibited massive necrosis with severe hemorrhage. Three weeks | |||
later, these tumors showed fibrosis with infiltration of chronic inflammatory cells and scattered | |||
carcinoma cells exhibiting degeneration. TP treatment of mice with LNCaP 104-R2 tumors reduced tumor | |||
androgen receptor and c-myc mRNA levels but increased prostate-specific antigen in serum- and | |||
prostate-specific antigen mRNA in tumors.</span><span> Although androgen ablation has been the | |||
standard treatment for metastatic prostate cancer for > 50 years, our study shows that androgen | |||
supplementation therapy may be beneficial for treatment of certain types of human prostate cancer | |||
and that the use of 5 alpha-reductase inhibitors, such as finasteride or anti-androgens, in the | |||
general treatment of metastatic prostate cancer may require careful assessment."</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>A. Vermeulen, "Testicular hormonal secretion and aging in males," in Benign prostatic hyperplasia (J. | |||
T. Grayhack, et al., eds), pp. 177-182, DHEW Publ. No. (NIH) 76-1113, 1976.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>A. Vermeulen, et al., "Testosterone secretion and metabolism in male senescence," J. Clin. Endocr. | |||
Metab. 34, 730-735, 1972.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>A. Vermeulen, et al., "Hormonal factors related to abnormal growth of the prostate," in Prostate | |||
Cancer (D. S. Coffey and J. T. Issacs, eds). UICC Technical Workshop Series, Vol 48, 81-92, UICC, | |||
Geneva.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>S. Zuckerman and J. R. Groome, "The aetiology of benign enlargement of the prostate in the dog," J. | |||
Pathol. Bact. 44, 113-124, 1937.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>B. Zumoff, et al., "Abnormal levels of plasma hormones in men with prostate cancer: Evidence | |||
toward a 'time-defense' theory," The Prostate 3, 579-588, 1982.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>M. Wehling, "Non-genomic steroid action--take a closer look, it's not rare!" Eur. J. of Endorinol. | |||
135, 287-288, 1996.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span>Wennbo H, Kindblom J, Isaksson OG, Tornell J., Endocrinology 1997 Oct;138(10):4410-4415. "Transgenic | |||
mice overexpressing the prolactin gene develop dramatic enlargement of the prostate gland," "An | |||
altered endocrine status of elderly men has been hypothesized to be important for development of | |||
prostate hyperplasia. The present study addresses the question whether increased PRL expression is of | |||
importance for development of prostate hyperplasia in mice. Three lines of PRL transgenic mice were | |||
generated having serum levels of PRL of approximately 15 ng/ml, 100 ng/ml, and 250 ng/ml, respectively. | |||
These mice developed dramatic enlargement of the prostate gland, approximately 20 times the normal | |||
prostate weight and they had a 4- to 5-fold increased DNA content. Histologically, the prostate glands | |||
in the transgenic mice were distended from secretion, and the amount of interstitial tissue was | |||
increased. The levels oftestosterone and IGF-I were increased in the PRL transgenic animals. In mice | |||
overexpressing the bovine GH gene, displaying elevated IGF-I levels, the prostate gland was slightly | |||
larger compared with normal mice, indicating that the effect of PRL was not primarily mediated through | |||
elevated plasma IGF-I levels. "<span>The present study suggests that PRL is an important factor in the | |||
development of prostate hyperplasia</span><span> acting directly on the prostate gland or via | |||
increased plasma levels of testosterone."</span></span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2013. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<strong>Protective CO2 and aging</strong> | |||
</p>The therapeutic effects of increasing carbon dioxide are being more widely recognized in recent years. Even | |||
Jane Brody, the NY Times writer on health topics, has favorably mentioned the use of the Buteyko method for | |||
asthma, and the idea of "permissive hypercapnia" during mechanical ventilation, to prevent lung damage from | |||
excess oxygen, has been discussed in medical journals. But still very few biologists recognize its role as a | |||
fundamental, universal protective factor. I think it will be helpful to consider some of the ways carbon dioxide | |||
might be controlling situations that otherwise are poorly understood. The brain has a high rate of oxidative | |||
metabolism, and so it forms a very large proportion of the carbon dioxide produced by an organism. It also | |||
governs, to a great extent, the metabolism of other tissues, including their consumption of oxygen and | |||
production of carbon dioxide or lactic acid. Within a particular species, the rate of oxygen consumption | |||
increases in proportion to brain size, rather than body weight. Between very different species, the role of the | |||
brain in metabolism is even more obvious, since the resting metabolic rate corresponds to the size of the brain. | |||
For example, a cat"s brain is about the size of a crocodile"s, and their oxygen consumption at rest is similar, | |||
despite their tremendous difference in body size.Stress has to be understood as a process that develops in time, | |||
and the brain (especially the neocortex and the frontal lobes) organizes the adaptive and developmental | |||
processes in both the spatial and temporal dimensions. The meaning of a situation influences the way the | |||
organism responds. For example, the stress of being restrained for a long time can cause major gastrointestinal | |||
bleeding and ulcerization, but if the animal has the opportunity to bite something during the stress (signifying | |||
its ability to fight back, and the possibility of escape) it can avoid the stress ulcers. The patterning of the | |||
nervous activity throughout the body governs the local ability to produce carbon dioxide. When the cortex of the | |||
brain is damaged or removed, an animal becomes rigid, so the cortex is considered to have a "tonic inhibitory | |||
action" on the body. But when the nerves are removed from a muscle (for example, by disease or accident), the | |||
muscle goes into a state of constant activity, and its ability to oxidize glucose and produce carbon dioxide is | |||
reduced, while its oxidation of fatty acids persists, increasing the production of toxic oxidative fragments of | |||
the fatty acids, which contributes to the muscle"s atrophy.The organism"s intentions, expectations, or plans, | |||
are represented in the nervous system as a greater readiness for action, and in the organs and tissues | |||
controlled by the nerves, as an increase or decrease of oxidative efficiency, analogous to the differences | |||
between innervated and denervated muscles. This pattern in the nervous system has been called "the acceptor of | |||
action," because it is continually being compared with the actual situation, and being refined as the situation | |||
is evaluated. The state of the organism, under the influence of a particular acceptor of action, is called a | |||
"functional system," including all the components of the organism that participate most directly in realizing | |||
the intended adaptive action.The actions of nerves can be considered anabolic, because during a stressful | |||
situation in which the catabolic hormones of adaption, e.g., cortisol, increase, the tissues of the functional | |||
system are protected, and while idle tissues may undergo autophagy or other form of involution, the needs of the | |||
active tissues are supplied with nutrients from their breakdown, allowing them to change and, when necessary, | |||
grow in size or complexity. The brain"s role in protecting against injury by stress, when it sees a course of | |||
action, has a parallel in the differences between concentric (positive, muscle shortening) and eccentric | |||
(negative, lengthening under tension) exercise, and also with the differences between innervated and denervated | |||
muscles. In eccentric exercise and denervation, less oxygen is used and less carbon dioxide is produced, while | |||
lactic acid increases, displacing carbon dioxide, and more fat is oxidized. Prolonged stress similarly decreases | |||
carbon dioxide and increases lactate, while increasing the use of fat.Darkness is stressful and catabolic. For | |||
example, in aging people, the morning urine contains nearly all of the calcium lost during the 24 hour period, | |||
and mitochondria are especially sensitive to the destructive effects of darkness. Sleep reduces the destructive | |||
catabolic effects of darkness. During the rapid-eye-movement (dreaming) phase of sleep, breathing is inhibited, | |||
and the level of carbon dioxide in the tissues accumulates. In restful sleep, the oxygen tension is frequently | |||
low enough, and the carbon dioxide tension high enough, to trigger the multiplication of stem cells and | |||
mitochondria.Dreams represent the "acceptor of action" operating independently of the sensory information that | |||
it normally interacts with. During dreams, the brain (using a system called the Ascending Reticular Activating | |||
System) disconnects itself from the sensory systems. I think this is the nervous equivalent of | |||
concentric/positive muscle activity, in the sense that the brain is in control of its actions. The active, | |||
dreaming phase of sleep occurs more frequently in the later part of the night, as morning approaches. This is | |||
the more stressful part of the night, with cortisol and some other stress hormones reaching a peak at dawn, so | |||
it would be reasonable for the brain"s defensive processes to be most active at that time. The dreaming process | |||
in the brain is associated with deep muscle relaxation, which is probably associated with the trophic | |||
(restorative) actions of the nerves.In ancient China the Taoists were concerned with longevity, and according to | |||
Joseph Needham (<em>Science and Civilization in China</em>) their methods included the use of herbs, minerals, | |||
and steroids extracted from the urine of children. Some of those who claimed extreme longevity practiced | |||
controlled breathing and tai chi (involving imagery, movement, and breating), typically in the early morning | |||
hours, when stress reduction is most important. As far as I know, there are no studies of carbon dioxide levels | |||
in practitioners of tai chi, but the sensation of warmth they typically report suggests that it involves | |||
hypoventilation.In the 1960s, a Russian researcher examined hospital records of measurements of newborn babies, | |||
and found that for several decades the size of their heads had been increasing. He suggested that it might be | |||
the result of increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide. The experiences and nutrition of a pregnant animal are | |||
known to affect the expression of genes in the offspring, affecting such things as allergies, metabolic rate, | |||
brain size, and intelligence. Miles Storfer (1999) has reviewed the evidence for epigenetic environmental | |||
control of brain size and intelligence. The main mechanisms of epigenetic effects or "imprinting" are now known | |||
to involve methylation and acetylation of the chromosomes (DNA and histones).Certain kinds of behavior, as well | |||
as nutrition and other environmental factors, increase the production and retention of carbon dioxide. The | |||
normal intrauterine level of carbon dioxide is high, and it can be increased or decreased by changes in the | |||
mother"s physiology. The effects of carbon dioxide on many biological processes involving methylation and | |||
acetylation of the genetic material suggest that the concentration of carbon dioxide during gestation might | |||
regulate the degree to which parental imprinting will persist in the developing fetus. There is some evidence of | |||
increased demethylation associated with the low level of oxygen in the uterus (Wellman, et al., 2008). A high | |||
metabolic rate and production of carbon dioxide would increase the adaptability of the new organism, by | |||
decreasing the limiting genetic imprints.A quick reduction of carbon dioxide caused by hyperventilation can | |||
provoke an epileptic seizure, and can increase muscle spasms and vascular leakiness, and (by releasing serotonin | |||
and histamine) contribute to inflammation and clotting disorders. On a slightly longer time scale, a reduction | |||
of carbon dioxide can increase the production of lactic acid, which is a promoter of inflammation and fibrosis. | |||
A prolonged decrease in carbon dioxide can increase the susceptibility of proteins to glycation (the addition of | |||
aldehydes, from polyunsaturated fat peroxidation or methylglyoxal from lactate metabolism, to amino groups), and | |||
a similar process is likely to contribute to the methylation of histones, a process that increases with aging. | |||
Histones regulate genetic activity.With aging, DNA methylation is increased (Bork, et al., 2009). <strong>I | |||
suggest that methylation stabilizes and protects cells when growth and regeneration aren"t possible (and | |||
that it"s likely to increase when CO2 isn"t available). | |||
</strong>Hibernation (Morin and Storey, 2009) and sporulation (Ruiz-Herrera, 1994; Clancy, et al., 2002) appear | |||
to use methylation protectively.Parental stress, prenatal stress, early life stress, and even stress in | |||
adulthood contribute to "imprinting of the genes," partly through methylation of DNA and the histones. | |||
Methionine and choline are the main dietary sources of methyl donors. Restriction of methionine has many | |||
protective effects, including increased average (42%) and maximum (44%) longevity in rats (Richie, et al., | |||
1994). Restriction of methyl donors causes demethylation of DNA (Epner, 2001). <strong></strong>The age | |||
accelerating effect of methionine might be related to disturbing the methylation balance, inappropriately | |||
suppressing cellular activity. Besides its effect on the methyl pool, methionine inhibits thyroid function and | |||
damages mitochondria. The local concentration of carbon dioxide in specific tissues and organs can be adjusted | |||
by nervous and hormonal activation or inhibition of the carbonic anhydrase enzymes, that accelerate the | |||
oonversion of CO2 to carbonic acid, H2CO3. The activity of carbonic anhydrase can determine the density and | |||
strength of the skeleton, the excitability of nerves, the accumulation of water, and can regulate the structure | |||
and function of the tissues and organs. Ordinarily, carbon dioxide and bicarbonate are thought of only in | |||
relation to the regulation of pH, and only in a very general way. Because of the importance of keeping the pH of | |||
the blood within a narrow range, carbon dioxide is commonly thought of as a toxin, because an excess can cause | |||
unconsciousness and acidosis. But increasing carbon dioxide doesn"t necessarily cause acidosis, and acidosis | |||
caused by carbon dioxide isn"t as harmful as lactic acidosis.Frogs and toads, being amphibians, are especially | |||
dependent on water, and in deserts or areas with a dry season they can survive a prolonged dry period by | |||
burrowing into mud or sand. Since they may be buried 10 or 11 inches below the surface, they are rarely found, | |||
and so haven"t been extensively studied. In species that live in the California desert, they have been known to | |||
survive 5 years of burial without rainfall, despite a moderately warm average temperature of their surroundings. | |||
One of their known adaptations is to produce a high level of urea, allowing them to osmotically absorb and | |||
retain water. (Very old people sometimes have extremely high urea and osmotic tension.)Some laboratory studies | |||
show that as a toad burrows into mud, the amount of carbon dioxide in its tissues increases. Their skin normally | |||
functions like a lung, exchanging oxygen for carbon dioxide. If the toad"s nostrils are at the surface of the | |||
mud, as dormancy begins its breathing will gradually slow, increasing the carbon dioxide even more. Despite the | |||
increasing carbon dioxide, the pH is kept stable by an increase of bicarbonate (Boutilier, et al., 1979). A | |||
similar increase of bicarbonate has been observed in hibernating hamsters and doormice.Thinking about the long | |||
dormancy of frogs reminded me of a newspaper story I read in the 1950s. Workers breaking up an old concrete | |||
structure found a dormant toad enclosed in the concrete, and it revived soon after being released. The concrete | |||
had been poured decades earlier. Although systematic study of frogs or toads during their natural buried | |||
estivation has been very limited, there have been many reports of accidental discoveries that suggest that the | |||
dormant state might be extended indefinitely if conditions are favorable. Carbon dioxide has antioxidant | |||
effects, and many other stabilizing actions, including protection against hypoxia and the excitatory effects of | |||
intracellular calcium and inflammation (Baev, et al., 1978, 1995; Bari, et al., 1996; Brzecka, 2007; Kogan, et | |||
al., 1994; Malyshev, et al., 1995).When mitochondria are "uncoupled," they produce more carbon dioxide than | |||
normal, and the mitochondria produce fewer free radicals. Animals with uncoupled mitochondria live longer than | |||
animals with the ordinary, more efficient mitochondria, that produce more reactive oxidative fragments. One | |||
effect of the high rate of oxidation of the uncoupled mitochondria is that they can eliminate polyunsatured | |||
fatty acids that might otherwise be integrated into tissue structures, or function as inappropriate regulatory | |||
signals.Birds have a higher metabolic rate than mammals of the same size, and live longer. Their tissues contain | |||
fewer of the highly unsaturated fatty acids. Queen bees, which live many times longer than worker bees, have | |||
mainly monounsaturated fats in their tissues, while the tissues of the short-lived worker bees, receiving a | |||
different diet, within a couple of weeks of hatching will contain highly unsaturated fats.Bats have a very high | |||
metabolic rate, and an extremely long lifespan for an animal of their size. While most animals of their small | |||
size live only a few years, many bats live a few decades. Bat caves usually have slightly more carbon dioxide | |||
than the outside atmosphere, but they usually contain a large amount of ammonia, and bats maintain a high serum | |||
level of carbon dioxide, which protects them from the otherwise toxic effects of the ammonia. The naked mole | |||
rat, another small animal with an extremely long lifespan (in captivity they have lived up to 30 years, 9 or 10 | |||
times longer than mice of the same size) has a low basal metabolic rate, but I think measurements made in | |||
laboratories might not represent their metabolic rate in their natural habitat. They live in burrows that are | |||
kept closed, so the percentage of oxygen is lower than in the outside air, and the percentage of carbon dioxide | |||
ranges from 0.2% to 5% (atmospheric CO2 is about 0.038). The temperature and humidity in their burrows can be | |||
extremely high, and to be very meaningful their metabolic rate would have to be measured when their body | |||
temperature is raised by the heat in the burrow.When they have been studied in Europe and the US, there has been | |||
no investigation of the effect of altitude on their metabolism, and these animals are native to the high plains | |||
of Kenya and Ethiopia, where the low atmospheric pressure would be likely to increase the level of carbon | |||
dioxide in their tissues. Consequently, I doubt that the longevity seen in laboratory situations accurately | |||
reflects the longevity of the animals in their normal habitat.Besides living in a closed space with a high | |||
carbon dioxide content, mole rats have another similarity to bees. In each colony, there is only one female that | |||
reproduces, the queen, and, like a queen bee, she is the largest individual in the colony. In beehives, the | |||
workers carefully regulate the carbon dioxide concentration, which varies from about 0.2% to 6%, similar to that | |||
of the mole rat colony. A high carbon dioxide content activates the ovaries of a queen bee, increasing her | |||
fertility.Since queen bees and mole rats live in the dark, I think their high carbon dioxide compensates for the | |||
lack of light. (Both light and CO2 help to maintain oxidative metabolism and inhibit lactic acid formation.) | |||
Mole rats are believed to sleep very little. During the night, normal people tolerate more CO2, and so breathe | |||
less, especially near morning, with increased active dreaming sleep. A mole rat has never been known to develop | |||
cancer. Their serum C-reactive protein is extremely low, indicating that they are resistant to inflammation. In | |||
humans and other animals that are susceptible to cancer, one of the genes that is likely to be silenced by | |||
stress, aging, and methylation is p53, a tumor-suppressor gene. If the intrauterine experience, with low oxygen | |||
and high carbon dioxide, serves to "reprogram" cells to remove the accumulated effects of age and stress, and so | |||
to maximize the developmental potential of the new organism, a life that"s lived with nearly those levels of | |||
oxygen and carbon dioxide might be able to avoid the progressive silencing of genes and loss of function that | |||
cause aging and degenerative diseases.Several diseases and syndromes are now thought to involve abnormal | |||
methylation of genes. Prader-Willi sydrome, Angelman"s syndrome, and various "autistic spectrum disorders," as | |||
well as post-traumatic stress disorder and several kinds of cancer seem to involve excess methylation. Moderate | |||
methionine restriction (for example, using gelatin regularly in the diet) might be practical, but if increased | |||
carbon dioxide can activate the demethylase enzymes in a controlled way, it might be a useful treatment for the | |||
degenerative diseases and for aging itself. The low carbon dioxide production of hypothyroidism (e.g., Lee and | |||
Levine, 1999), and the respiratory alkalosis of estrogen excess, are often overlooked. An adequate supply of | |||
calcium, and sometimes supplementation of salt and baking soda, can increase the tissue content of CO2.<span | |||
style="white-space: pre-wrap" | |||
> | |||
</span> | |||
<h3>REFERENCES</h3>Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2009 Apr;296(4):E621-7. <strong>Uncoupling protein-2 regulates | |||
lifespan in mice.</strong> Andrews ZB, Horvath TL. Fiziol Zh SSSR 1978 Oct;64(10):1456-62. <strong>[Role of | |||
CO2 fixation in increasing the body's resistance to acute hypoxia].</strong> Baev VI, Vasil'ev VV, Nikolaeva | |||
EN. In rats, the phenomenon of considerable increase in resistance to acute hypoxia observed after 2-hour stay | |||
under conditions of gradually increasing concentration of CO2, decreasing concentration of O2, and external | |||
cooling at 2--3 degrees seems to be based mainly on changes in concentration of CO2 (ACCORDINGLY, PCO2 and other | |||
forms of CO2 in the blood). The high resistance to acute hypoxia develops as well after subcutaneous or i.v. | |||
administration of 1.0 ml of water solution (169.2 mg/200 g) NaHCO2, (NH4)2SO4, MgSO4, MnSO4, and ZnSO4 (in | |||
proportion: 35 : 5 : 2 : 0.15 : 0.15, resp.) or after 1-hour effect of increased hypercapnia and hypoxia without | |||
cooling. Fiziol Zh Im I M Sechenova 1995 Feb;81(2):47-52.<strong> | |||
[The unknown physiological role of carbon dioxide].</strong> Baev VI, Vasil'eva IV, L'vov SN, Shugalei IV | |||
[The data suggests that carbon dioxide is a natural element of the organism antioxidant defence system. ion | |||
poisoning].Stroke. 1996 Sep;27(9):1634-9; discussion 1639-40. <strong>Differential effects of short-term hypoxia | |||
and hypercapnia on N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced cerebral vasodilatation in piglets.</strong> Bari F, Errico | |||
RA, Louis TM, Busija DW.Vojnosanit Pregl. 1996 Jul-Aug;53(4):261-74. <strong>[Carbon dioxide inhibits the | |||
generation of active forms of oxygen in human and animal cells and the significance of the phenomenon in | |||
biology and medicine]</strong> [Article in Serbian] Boljevic S, Kogan AH, Gracev SV, Jelisejeva SV, Daniljak | |||
IG.J Exp Biol. 1979 Oct;82:357-65. <strong>Acid-base relationships in the blood of the toad, Bufo marinus. III. | |||
The effects of burrowing. | |||
</strong>Boutilier RG, Randall DJ, Shelton G, Toews DP.Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars). 2007;67(2):197-206. <strong | |||
>Role of hypercapnia in brain oxygenation in sleep-disordered breathing.</strong> Brzecka A. Adaptive mechanisms | |||
may diminish the detrimental effects of recurrent nocturnal hypoxia in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). The | |||
potential role of elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) in improving brain oxygenation in the patients with severe OSA | |||
syndrome is discussed. CO2 increases oxygen uptake by its influence on the regulation of alveolar ventilation | |||
and ventilation-perfusion matching, facilitates oxygen delivery to the tissues by changing the affinity of | |||
oxygen to hemoglobin, and increases cerebral blood flow by effects on arterial blood pressure and on cerebral | |||
vessels. Recent clinical studies show improved brain oxygenation when hypoxia is combined with hypercapnia. | |||
Anti-inflammatory and protective against organ injury properties of CO2 may also have therapeutic importance. | |||
These biological effects of hypercapnia may improve brain oxygenation under hypoxic conditions. This may be | |||
especially important in patients with severe OSA syndrome.Ageing Res Rev. 2009 Oct;8(4):268-76. Epub 2009 Apr 1. | |||
<strong>The role of epigenetics in aging and age-related diseases.</strong> Calvanese V, Lara E, Kahn A, Fraga | |||
MF.Rev Esp Geriatr Gerontol. 2009 Jul-Aug;44(4):194-9. Epub 2009 Jul 3. <strong>[Effect of restricting amino | |||
acids except methionine on mitochondrial oxidative stress.] | |||
</strong>[Article in Spanish] Caro P, G"mez J, S"nchez I, L"pez-Torres M, Barja G.Cell Metab. 2007 | |||
Jan;5(1):21-33. <strong>A central thermogenic-like mechanism in feeding regulation: an interplay between arcuate | |||
nucleus T3 and UCP2.</strong> Coppola A, Liu ZW, Andrews ZB, Paradis E, Roy MC, Friedman JM, Ricquier D, | |||
Richard D, Horvath TL, Gao XB, Diano S.Ter Arkh. 1995;67(3):23-6. <strong>[Changes in the sensitivity of | |||
leukocytes to the inhibiting effect of CO2 on their generation of active forms of oxygen in bronchial asthma | |||
patients]</strong> Daniliak IG, Kogan AKh, Sumarokov AV, Bolevich S.Cell Metab. 2007 Dec;6(6):497-505. | |||
<strong>Respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle delays death and diminishes age-related disease.</strong> | |||
Gates AC, Bernal-Mizrachi C, Chinault SL, Feng C, Schneider JG, Coleman T, Malone JP, Townsend RR, Chakravarthy | |||
MV, Semenkovich CF.Endocr Pract. 2009 Jun 2:1-13.<strong> | |||
Fibrotic Appearance of Lungs in Severe Hypothyroidism is Reversible with Thyroxine Replacement.</strong> | |||
George JT, Thow JC, Rodger KA, Mannion R, Jayagopal V.J Bioenerg Biomembr. 2009 Jun;41(3):309-21. Epub 2009 Jul | |||
25. <strong>Effect of methionine dietary supplementation on mitochondrial oxygen radical generation and | |||
oxidative DNA damage in rat liver and heart. | |||
</strong>Gomez J, Caro P, Sanchez I, Naudi A, Jove M, Portero-Otin M, Lopez-Torres M, Pamplona R, Barja G.Proc | |||
Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996 Jul 23;93(15):7612-7. <strong>Increased tricarboxylic acid cycle flux in rat brain | |||
during forepaw stimulation detected with 1H[13C]NMR. | |||
</strong>Hyder F, Chase JR, Behar KL, Mason GF, Siddeek M, Rothman DL, Shulman RG.Can J Neurol Sci. 1979 | |||
May;6(2):105-12. <strong>The effects of partial chronic denervation on forearm metabolism.</strong> Karpati G, | |||
Klassen G, Tanser P.Biull Eksp Biol Med. 1994 Oct;118(10):395-8. <strong>[CO2--a natural inhibitor of active | |||
oxygen form generation by phagocytes]</strong> Kogan AKh, Manuilov BM, Grachev SV, Bolevich S, Tsypin AB, | |||
Daniliak IG.Izv Akad Nauk Ser Biol. 1997 Mar-Apr;(2):204-17.<strong> | |||
[Carbon dioxide--a universal inhibitor of the generation of active oxygen forms by cells (deciphering one | |||
enigma of evolution)] | |||
</strong>Kogan AKh, Grachev SV, Eliseeva SV, Bolevich S.Vopr Med Khim. 1996 Jul-Sep;42(3):193-202.<strong> | |||
[Ability of carbon dioxide to inhibit generation of superoxide anion radical in cells and its biomedical | |||
role]</strong> Kogan AKh, Grachev SV, Eliseeva SV, Bolevich S.Dokl Akad Nauk. 1996 May;348(3):413-6. <strong | |||
>[New evidence for the inhibitory action of CO2 on generation of superoxide anion radicals by phagocytes in | |||
various tissues. (Mechanism of bio- and eco-effects of CO2)] | |||
</strong>Kogan AKh, Grachev SV, Bolevich S, Eliseeva SV.Biull Eksp Biol Med. 1996 Apr;121(4):407-10. <strong | |||
>[Carbon dioxide gas inhibition of active forms of oxygen generation by cells in the internal organs and its | |||
biological significance]</strong> Kogan AKh, Grachev SV, Eliseeva SV.Fiziol Cheloveka. 1995 | |||
Jul-Aug;21(4):128-36. <strong>[CO2--a natural inhibitor of the generation of active species of oxygen in | |||
phagocytes]</strong> Kogan AKh, Manuilov BM, Grachev SV, Bolevich S, Tsypin AB, Daniliak IG.<strong>Patol | |||
Fiziol Eksp Ter. 1995 Jul-Sep;(3):34-40. [Comparative study of the effect of carbon dioxide on the | |||
generation of active forms of oxygen by leukocytes in health and in bronchial asthma]</strong> Kogan AKh, | |||
Bolevich S, Daniliak IG.Can J Anaesth. 1999 Feb;46(2):185-9. <strong>Acute respiratory alkalosis associated with | |||
low minute ventilation in a patient with severe hypothyroidism.</strong> Lee HT, Levine M.Tl128@columbia.edu | |||
PURPOSE: Patients with severe hypothyroidism present unique challenges to anesthesiologists and demonstrate much | |||
increased perioperative risks. Overall, they display increased sensitivity to anesthetics, higher incidence of | |||
perioperative cardiovascular morbidity, increased risks for postoperative ventilatory failure and other | |||
physiological derangements. The previously described physiological basis for the increased incidence of | |||
postoperative ventilatory failure in hypothyroid patients includes decreased central and peripheral ventilatory | |||
responses to hypercarbia and hypoxia, muscle weakness, depressed central respiratory drive, and resultant | |||
alveolar hypoventilation. These ventilatory failures are associated most frequently with severe hypoxia and | |||
carbon dioxide (CO2) retention. The purpose of this clinical report is to discuss an interesting and unique | |||
anesthetic presentation of a patient with severe hypothyroidism. CLINICAL FEATURES: We describe an unique | |||
presentation of ventilatory failure in a 58 yr old man with severe hypothyroidism. He had exceedingly low | |||
perioperative respiratory rate (3-4 bpm) and minute ventilation volume, and at the same time developed primary | |||
acute respiratory alkalosis and associated hypocarbia (P(ET)CO2 approximately 320-22 mmHg). CONCLUSION: Our | |||
patient's ventilatory failure was based on unacceptably low minute ventilation and respiratory rate that was | |||
unable to sustain adequate oxygenation. His profoundly lowered basal metabolic rate and decreased CO2 | |||
production, resulting probably from severe hypothyroidism, may have resulted in development of acute respiratory | |||
alkalosis in spite of concurrently diminished minute ventilation.Anal Bioanal Chem. 2008 Jan;390(2):679-88. Epub | |||
2007 Oct 27. <strong>The structural modification of DNA nucleosides by nonenzymatic glycation: an in vitro study | |||
based on the reactions of glyoxal and methylglyoxal with 2'-deoxyguanosine.</strong> Li Y, Cohenford MA, | |||
Dutta U, Dain JA.Biull Eksp Biol Med. 1995 Jun;119(6):590-3. <strong>[Adaptation to high altitude hypoxia | |||
facilitates a limitation of lipid peroxidation activation in inflammation and stress] [Article in | |||
Russian]</strong>Malyshev VV, Vasil'eva LS, Belogorov SB, Nefedova TV.Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp | |||
Physiol. 2007 Sep;293(3):R1159-68. Epub 2007 Jun 20.<strong>Denervation-induced skeletal muscle atrophy is | |||
associated with increased mitochondrial ROS production.</strong> Muller FL, Song W, Jang YC, Liu Y, Sabia M, | |||
Richardson A, Van Remmen H.Radiobiologiia. 1984 Jan-Feb;24(1):29-34. <strong>[Enzyme activity of glutamic acid | |||
metabolism and the Krebs cycle in the brain of rats laser-irradiated against a background of altered | |||
adrenoreceptor function] [Article in Russian] | |||
</strong>Pikulev AT, Dzhugurian NA, Zyrianova TN, Lavrova VM, Mostovnikov VA.Rejuvenation Res.2007 Dec12; | |||
:18072884, <strong>Exploring Overlooked Natural Mitochondria-Rejuvenative Intervention: The Puzzle of Bowhead | |||
Whales and Naked Mole Rats. | |||
</strong>Prokopov A.F.Proceedings of the Japan Academy. Ser. B: Physical and Biological Sciences Vol.78, | |||
No.10(2002)pp.293-298. <strong>DNA methylation and Lamarckian inheritance, </strong>Sano H.Biol Chem. 2009 | |||
Nov;390(11):1145-53. <strong>The epigenetic bottleneck of neurodegenerative and psychiatric diseases. | |||
</strong>Sananbenesi F, Fischer A. The orchestrated expression of genes is essential for the development and | |||
survival of every organism. In addition to the role of transcription factors, the availability of genes for | |||
transcription is controlled by a series of proteins that regulate epigenetic chromatin remodeling. The two most | |||
studied epigenetic phenomena are DNA methylation and histone-tail modifications. Although a large body of | |||
literature implicates the deregulation of histone acetylation and DNA methylation with the pathogenesis of | |||
cancer, recently epigenetic mechanisms have also gained much attention in the neuroscientific community. In | |||
fact, a new field of research is rapidly emerging and there is now accumulating evidence that the molecular | |||
machinery that regulates histone acetylation and DNA methylation is intimately involved in synaptic plasticity | |||
and is essential for learning and memory. Importantly, dysfunction of epigenetic gene expression in the brain | |||
might be involved in neurodegenerative and psychiatric diseases. In particular, it was found that inhibition of | |||
histone deacetylases attenuates synaptic and neuronal loss in animal models for various neurodegenerative | |||
diseases and improves cognitive function. In this article, we will summarize recent data in the novel field of | |||
neuroepigenetics and discuss the question why epigenetic strategies are suitable therapeutic approaches for the | |||
treatment of brain diseases.Ukr Biokhim Zh 1994 Jan-Feb;66(1):109-12. <strong>[Protective effect of sodium | |||
bicarbonate in nitrite ion poisoning].</strong> Shugalei IV, L'vov SN, Baev VI, Tselinskii IVAm J Respir | |||
Crit Care Med. 2000 Mar;161(3 Pt 1):891-8. <strong>Modulation of release of reactive oxygen species by the | |||
contracting diaphragm.</strong> Stofan DA, Callahan LA, DiMarco AF, Nethery DE, Supinski GS.Ecology: Vol. | |||
50, No. 3, pp. 492-494. <strong>Carbon Dioxide Retention: A Mechanism of Ammonia Tolerance in Mammals.</strong> | |||
Studier EM and Fresquez AA. Sci Signal. 2009 Mar 31;2(64): pe17. <strong>Reversing DNA methylation: new insights | |||
from neuronal activity-induced Gadd45b in adult neurogenesis. | |||
</strong>Wu H, Sun YE. Neurogenesis in the adult mammalian brain involves activity-dependent expression of genes | |||
critical for the proliferation of progenitors and for neuronal maturation. A recent study suggests that the | |||
stress response gene Gadd45b (growth arrest and DNA-damage-inducible protein 45 beta) can be transiently induced | |||
by neuronal activity and may promote adult neurogenesis through dynamic DNA demethylation of specific gene | |||
promoters in adult hippocampus. These results provide evidence supporting the provocative ideas that active DNA | |||
demethylation may occur in postmitotic neurons and that DNA methylation-mediated dynamic epigenetic regulation | |||
is involved in regulating long-lasting changes in neural plasticity in mammalian brains.Patol Fiziol Eksp Ter. | |||
2005 Apr-Jun;(2):13-5. <strong>[The effect of the NMDA-receptor blocker MK-801 on sensitivity of the respiratory | |||
system to carbon dioxide]</strong> Tarakanov IA, Dymetska A, Tarasova NN.Life Sci. 1997;61(5):523-35. | |||
<strong>Effect of acidotic challenges on local depolarizations evoked by N-methyl-D-aspartate in the rat | |||
striatum.</strong> Urenjak J, Zilkha E, Gotoh M, Obrenovitch TP. "Hypercapnia reduced NMDA-evoked responses | |||
in a concentration-dependent manner, with 7.5 and 15 % CO2 in the breathing mixture reducing the depolarization | |||
amplitude to 74 % and 64 % of that of the initial stimuli, respectively. Application of 50 mM NH4+ progressively | |||
reduced dialysate pH, and a further acidification was observed when NH4+ was discontinued. Perfusion of NMDA | |||
after NH4+ application evoked smaller depolarizations (56 % of the corresponding control, 5 min after NH4+ | |||
removal), and this effect persisted for over 1 h." "Together, these results demonstrate that extracellular | |||
acidosis, such as that associated with excessive neuronal activation or ischemia, inhibits NMDA-evoked responses | |||
in vivo."Arch Int Physiol Biochim. 1977 Apr;85(2):295-304. <strong>Glutamate and glutamine in the brain of the | |||
neonatal rat during hypercapnia.</strong> Van Leuven F, Weyne J, Leusen I.<strong>Pediatrics 1995 | |||
Jun;95(6):868-874. Carbon dioxide protects the perinatal brain from hypoxic-ischemic damage: an experimental | |||
study in the immature rat.</strong> Vannucci RC, Towfighi J, Heitjan DF, Brucklacher RMPediatr Res 1997 | |||
Jul;42(1):24-29. <strong>Effect of carbon dioxide on cerebral metabolism during hypoxia-ischemia in the immature | |||
rat. | |||
</strong>Vannucci RC, Brucklacher RM, Vannucci SJSci. Signal., 31 March 2009 Vol. 2, Issue 64, p. pe17, <strong | |||
>Reversing DNA Methylation: New Insights from Neuronal Activity-Induced Gadd45b in Adult Neurogenesis</strong> | |||
Wu H, Sun YI<p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2012. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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Regeneration and degeneration: Types of inflammation change with aging</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p></p>For about 100 years it has been popular to explain the degenerative diseases as the result of mutations | |||
in the genes, a slow accumulation of "somatic mutations," as opposed to the "germ cell mutations" that are | |||
involved in Huntington"s chorea and sickle cell anemia. Some people explained all the changes of aging on the | |||
same basis, but 50 years ago, the somatic mutation theory of aging was clearly shown to be false. The | |||
gene-mutation theory of cancer is more persistent, but the work of people like Harry Rubin has made it clear | |||
that functional changes in cells that are becoming cancerous destabilize the chromosomes and cause defects to | |||
appear in the genes, rather than the reverse.Older ways of understanding aging and degenerative disease are now | |||
returning to the foreground. The developmental interactions of the organism with its environment, and the | |||
interactions of its cells, tissues, and organs with each other, have again become the focus of biological aging | |||
research. In place of the old belief that "we are defined and limited by our genes," the new perspective is | |||
showing us that we are limited by our environment, and that our environment can be modified. As we react to | |||
unsuitable environments, our internal environments become limiting for our cells, and instead of renewing | |||
themselves, repairing damage, and preparing for new challenges, our cells find themselves in blind alleys. | |||
Looking at aging in this way suggests that putting ourselves into the right environments could prevent aging.A | |||
bird developing inside its eggshell illustrates the way organs and the environment interact. The chicken created | |||
a very good environment for the early development of its young. When the egg is formed, it contains everything | |||
needed to produce a chicken, except for oxygen and a steady warm temperature. But before the chick"s body has | |||
finished developing, using yolk fat for energy, the glucose contained in the egg has been consumed, and at that | |||
point the chick"s brain stops growing. A researcher who knew that brain growth in other kinds of animals | |||
requires glucose, injected glucose (or glycine) into the developing eggs when the original glucose had been | |||
depleted. The supplemental glucose allowed the chick"s brain to continue growing until it hatched. These chicks | |||
had larger brains, containing more numerous cells. The same experimenters also found that progesterone increases | |||
brain size, while corticosterone decreases it. Although the egg is a very good environment for the development | |||
of chickens, these experiments showed that it isn"t the best that can be achieved. If the hen"s environment had | |||
been different, it might have been able to provide as much glucose and progesterone as the experimenters did. | |||
Mammals were able to develop bigger brains than birds, by gestating their offspring internally, allowing a | |||
continuous supply of nutrients, such as glucose, and hormones such as progesterone. But the environment of the | |||
mother still can profoundly affect the development of the offspring, by influencing her physiology.Another | |||
factor involved in developing a large brain is the metabolic rate, which is closely associated with the | |||
temperature. Birds have larger brains relative to their bodies than reptiles do, and birds maintain a | |||
consistently high body temperature, sometimes as high as 110 degrees F, while reptiles" temperature varies | |||
somewhat according to the temperature of their surroundings and their level of activity. Amphibians have much | |||
lower metabolic rates, and are generally unable to live at the higher temperatures required by reptiles. The | |||
high metabolic rate of a bird, combined with its development inside an egg, means that compromises are made. The | |||
high rate of metabolism uses the stored energy rapidly, so the growth of the brain is limited. But their very | |||
high body temperature maximizes the effectiveness of that brain. Birds, such as owls, parrots, and crows, that | |||
hatch in a less developed, more dependent condition, are able to continue their brain growth, and have larger | |||
brains than other birds, such as chickens. In birds and mammals, longevity generally corresponds to brain size | |||
and metabolic rate. (For example, a pet crow, Tata, died at the age of 59 in 2006 in New York; parrots sometimes | |||
live more than 100 years.) These (altricious) birds are the opposite of precocious, they preserve embryonic or | |||
infantile traits into adulthood.For whole organisms or for single cells, development depends on the adequacy of | |||
the environment. Temperature and the quality of nourishment are important, and by thinking about the other | |||
special features of the growth processes during gestation, we might be able to find that some of the compromises | |||
that are customarily made in our more mature lives aren"t necessary. One way of looking at aging is that it"s a | |||
failure of regeneration or healing, related to changes in the nature of inflammation. In childhood, wounds heal | |||
quickly, and inflammation is quickly resolved; in extreme old age, or during extreme stress or starvation, wound | |||
healing is much slower, and the nature of the inflammation and wound closure is different. In the fetus, healing | |||
can be regenerative and scarless, for example allowing a cleft palate to be surgically corrected without scars | |||
(Weinzweig, et al., 2002).Fifty years ago, inflammation was seen as a necessary part of the healing process, but | |||
now it is recognized as a cause of heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and aging itself. During the development of | |||
the organism, the nature of healing changes, as the nature of inflammation changes. Early in life, healing is | |||
regenerative or restorative, and there is little inflammation. In adulthood as the amount of inflammation | |||
increases, healing fails to completely restore lost structures and functions, resulting in scarring, the | |||
replacement of functional tissue with fibrous tissue. Identifiable changes in the nature of inflammation under | |||
different conditions can explain some of these losses of healing capacity. Factors that limit inflammation and | |||
fibrosis, while permitting tissue remodeling, could facilitate regeneration and retard aging.Several cytokines | |||
(proteins that regulate cell functions) appear at much higher concentrations in adult tissues than in fetal | |||
tissues (PDGF A, three forms of TGF, IGF 1, and bFGF; Wagner, et al., 2007), and when one of these (TGF-beta1) | |||
is added to the healing fetus, it produces inflammation and fibrosis (Lanning, et al., 1999). Two | |||
prostaglandins, PGE2 and PGF2a, potently produce inflammation in fetal rabbits, but not in adult rabbits. | |||
(Morykwas, et al., 1994).Tissue injury that would produce inflammation in adults causes other signals in the | |||
fetus that activate repair processes. When a cell is injured or stressed, for example when deprived of oxygen, | |||
it becomes incontinent, and releases ATP into its surroundings. The extracellular ATP, and its breakdown | |||
products, ADP, AMP, adenosine, and inorganic phosphate or pyrophosphate, stimulate cells in various ways. ATP | |||
causes vasodilation, increasing circulation, and usually signals cells to divide, and can activate stem cells | |||
(Yu, et al., 2010) The lactic acid produced by distressed cells also has signalling effects, including | |||
vasodilation and stimulated division. Stressed cells digest their own proteins and other structural materials | |||
(autophagy), and the breakdown products act as signals to guide the differentiation of their replacement cells. | |||
Mobile phagocytes, ingesting the material of decomposing cells, are essential for guiding tissue restoration. In | |||
adults, prostaglandins are known to be involved in many of the harmful effects of inflammation. They are formed | |||
from the polyunsaturated fats, linoleic acid and arachidonic acid, which we are unable to synthesize ourselves, | |||
so the adult"s exposure to the prostaglandins is influence by diet. Since the fetus is able to synthesize fat | |||
from glucose, the newborn animal usually contains a high proportion of saturated fats and their derivatives, | |||
such as stearic acid, oleic acid, and Mead acid, which can be synthesized from glucose or amino acids. Newborn | |||
calves have very little polyunsaturated fat in their tissues, but even the small percentage of PUFA in milk | |||
causes its tissues to gradually accumulate a higher percentage of PUFA as it matures. The fatty acids of newborn | |||
humans, and other non-ruminants, reflect their mothers" diets more closely, but Mead acid is still present in | |||
human newborns (Al, et al., 1990). In a study of prenatal learning (habituation rate), the experimenters found | |||
that the relative absence of the supposedly essential fatty acids improved the short term and long term memory | |||
of the fetus (Dirix, et al., 2009). The size of the baby was found to be negatively associated with the highly | |||
unsaturated fatty acids DHA and AA (Dirix, et al., 2009), showing a general growth-retarding effect of these | |||
environmentally derived fats.The embryo or fetus is enclosed in a germ-free environment, so it doesn"t need an | |||
"immune system" in the ordinary sense, but it does contain phagocytes, which are an essential part of | |||
development, in the embryo, as well as in the adult (Bukovky, et al., 2000). They are involved in removing | |||
malignant cells, healing wounds, and remodeling tissues. In adults, the long-chain omega-3 fatty acids such as | |||
DHA are known to be immunosuppressive, but in tests on monocytes from the umbilical cord blood of newborns, the | |||
highly unsaturated fatty acids kill the monocytes that are so important for proper development and regeneration | |||
(Sweeney, et al., 2001), and interfere with signals that govern their migration (Ferrante, et al., 1994). DHA is | |||
now being sold with many health claims, including the idea that adding it to baby formula will improve their | |||
eyesight and intelligence. As the consumption of PUFA has increased in the US and many other countries, the | |||
incidence of birth defects has increased. The formation of excessive amounts of prostaglandin, or killing | |||
macrophages, among other toxic effects, might be responsible for those visible anatomical changes during growth, | |||
as well as for the subtler loss of regenerative capacity.In the adult, the PUFA and prostaglandins are known to | |||
increase collagen synthesis. Serotonin and estrogen, which interact closely with PUFA, promote collagen | |||
synthesis and fibrosis. In the fetus, hyaluronic acid, rather than collagen, is the main extracellular material | |||
in wound repair (Krummel, et al., 1987). Both it and its decomposition products have important regulatory | |||
"signal" functions in wound healing (Gao, et al., 2008), inflammation, and cell differentiation (Krasinski and | |||
Tch"rzewski, 2007). Prostaglandins also inhibit local cell division (observed in the cornea, Staatz and Van | |||
Horn, 1980), shifting responsibility for tissue repair to mobile cells, for example stem cells from the blood. | |||
PUFA also interfere with the turnover of collagen by inhibiting proteolytic enzymes that are necessary for | |||
tissue remodeling. These are among the changes that characterize scar formation, rather than the scarless | |||
regeneration that can occur in the fetus. They also occur throughout the body with aging, as part of a | |||
progressive fibrosis.Besides minimizing dietary PUFA, other things are known that will reduce the fibrosis | |||
associated with injury, inflammation, or aging. Thyroid hormone, progesterone, and carbon dioxide all reduce | |||
inflammation while facilitating normal tissue remodeling. Fibrosis of the heart and liver, which are often | |||
considered to be unavoidably progressive, can be regressed by thyroid hormone, and various fibroses, including | |||
breast, liver, and mesentery, have been regressed by progesterone treatment.The thyroid hormone is necessary for | |||
liver regeneration, and the ability of the thyroid gland itself to regenerate might be related to the also great | |||
ability of the adrenal cortex to regenerate--the cells of these endocrine glands are frequently stimulated, even | |||
by intrinsic factors such as T3 in the thyroid, and seem to have an intrinsic stem-cell-like quality, | |||
turning-over frequently. Secretion of stimulating substances is probably one of the functions of macrophages in | |||
these glands (Ozbek & Ozbek, 2006) The failure to recognize the glands" regenerative ability leads to many | |||
inappropriate medical treatments. The amount of disorganized fibrous material formed in injured tissue is | |||
variable, and it depends on the state of the individual, and on the particular situation of the tissue. For | |||
example, the membranes lining the mouth, and the bones and bone marrow, and the thymus gland are able to | |||
regenerate without scarring. What they have in common with each other is a relatively high ratio of carbon | |||
dioxide to oxygen. Salamanders, which are able to regenerate legs, jaw, spinal cord, retina and parts of the | |||
brain (Winklemann & Winklemann, 1970), spend most of their time under cover in burrows, which besides | |||
preventing drying of their moist skin, keeps the ratio of carbon dioxide to oxygen fairly high.The regeneration | |||
of finger tips, including a well-formed nail if some of the base remained, will occur if the wounded end of the | |||
finger is kept enclosed, for example by putting a metal or plastic tube over the finger. The humidity keeps the | |||
wound from forming a dry scab, and the cells near the surface will consume oxygen and produce carbon dioxide, | |||
keeping the ratio of carbon dioxide to oxygen much higher than in normal uninjured tissue. Carbon dioxide is | |||
being used increasingly to prevent inflammation and edema. For example, it can be used to prevent adhesions | |||
during abdominal surgery, and to protect the lungs during mechanical ventilation. It inhibits the formation of | |||
inflammatory cytokines and prostaglandins (Peltekova, et al., 2010, Peng, et al., 2009, Persson & van den | |||
Linden, 2009), and reduces the leakiness of the intestine (Morisaki, et al., 2009). Some experiments show that | |||
as it decreases the production of some inflammatory materials by macrophages (TNF: Lang, et al., 2005), | |||
including lactate, it causes macrophages to activate phagocytic neutrophils, and to increase their number and | |||
activity (Billert, et al., 2003, Baev & Kuprava, 1997).Factors that are associated with a decreased level of | |||
carbon dioxide, such as excess estrogen and lactate, promote fibrosis. Adaptation to living at high altitude, | |||
which is protective against degenerative disease, involves reduced lactate formation, and increased carbon | |||
dioxide. It has been suggested that keloid formation (over-growth of scar tissue) is less frequent at high | |||
altitudes (Ranganathan, 1961), though this hasn"t been carefully studied. Putting an injured arm or leg into a | |||
bag of pure carbon dioxide reduces pain and accelerates healing. In aging, the removal of inactive cells becomes | |||
incomplete (Aprahamian, et al., 2008). It is this removal of cellular debris that is essential for regenerative | |||
healing to take place. Degenerating tissue stimulates the formation of new tissue, but this requires adequate | |||
cellular energy for phagocytosis, which requires proper thyroid function. "Hyperthyroidism" has been shown to | |||
accelerate the process (Lewin-Kowalik, et al., 2002). The active thyroid hormone, T3, stimulates the removal of | |||
inactive cells (Kurata, et al., 1980). Regenerative healing also requires freedom from substances that inhibit | |||
the digestion of the debris. The great decline in proteolytic autophagy that occurs with aging (Del Roso, et | |||
al., 2003) can be reduced by inhibiting the release of fatty acids. This effect is additive to the antiaging | |||
effects of calorie restriction, suggesting that it is largely the decrease of dietary fats that makes calorie | |||
restriction effective (Donati, et al., 2004, 2008).Niacinamide is a nutrient that inhibits the release of fatty | |||
acids, and it also activates phagocytic activity and lowers phosphate. It protects against the development of | |||
scars in spinal cord injuries, facilitates recovery from traumatic brain injury, and accelerates healing | |||
generally. While it generally supports immunity, it"s protective against autoimmunity. It can cause tumor cells | |||
to either mature or disintegrate, but it prolongs the replicative life of cultured cells, and protects against | |||
excitotoxicity. The amounts needed seem large if niacinamide is thought of as "vitamin B3," but it should be | |||
considered as a factor that compensates for our unphysiological exposure to inappropriate fats. Aspirin and | |||
vitamin E are other natural substances that are therapeutic in "unnaturally" large amounts because of our | |||
continual exposure to the highly unsaturated plant-derived n-3 and n-6 fats.When animals are made "deficient" in | |||
the polyunsaturated fatty acids, their wounds heal, with normal or accelerated collagen synthesis, and with more | |||
vigorous collagen breakdown (Parnham, et al., 1977). Their blood vessels are more resistant, preventing shock | |||
that would otherwise be caused by many factors. All phases of development, from gestation to aging, are altered | |||
by the presence of the unsaturated fats, and these effects correspond closely to the loss of the regenerative | |||
capacity, the ability to replenish and restore tissues. If the very small amounts of polyunsaturated fats | |||
reaching the fetus can retard growth and brain development (Liu and Borgman, 1977; Borgman, et al., 1975) and | |||
function, it is apparently acting on some very important biological processes. The toxic effects of PUFA seen in | |||
the animal studies probably have their equivalent in humans, for example the association of childhood | |||
hyperactivity with a smaller brain. The incidence of the attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder is increasing | |||
in the US, somewhat faster among girls than boys (Robison, et al.,2002). In schizophrenic teenagers, the brain | |||
shrinks, suggesting an interaction of the hormones of puberty with environmental toxins or deficiencies. The | |||
progressive accumulation of much larger amounts of these fats later in life, especially after the rate of growth | |||
decreases, could be expected to cause even greater interference with those processes of development and | |||
function. All tissues age, but the brain might be the least ambiguous organ to consider. The aging brain often | |||
shrinks, and becomes more susceptible to excitotoxicity, which kills brain cells. Degenerative brain diseases, | |||
such as Huntington"s chorea and Creutzfeld-Jacob disease, have been compared to the dementia of pellagra, in | |||
which chorea and other excitatory processes are obvious. (Anti-glutamatergic drugs are beginning to be used | |||
therapeutically, to restore some inhibitory balance in the degenerating brain.)Pellagra occurs about twice as | |||
often in women as in men, and this is because estrogen activates an enzyme that alters metabolism of tryptophan, | |||
blocking the formation of niacin. The alternative products include the excitotoxin, quinolinic acid, and some | |||
carcinogens.Progesterone inhibits the activity of that enzyme. Progesterone also lowers brain serotonin | |||
(Izquierdo, et al., 1978), decreases the excitatory carcinogens (Moursi, et al., 1970) and increases the | |||
formation of niacin (Shibata, et al., 2003) The polyunsaturated fats, DHA, EPA, and linoleic acid activate the | |||
conversion of tryptophan to quinolinic acid (Egashira, et al., 2003, 2004), and inhibit the formation of niacin | |||
(Egashira, et al., 1995). <strong></strong>The normal pathway from tryptophan to niacin leads to formation of | |||
the coenzyme NAD, which is involved in a great variety of cellular processes, notably energy production, the | |||
maintenance of the cellular differentiated state by regulating gene expression, and the activity of phagocytes. | |||
Glucose and niacinamide work very closely with each other, and with the thyroid hormone, in the maintenance and | |||
repair of cells and tissues. When one of these energy-producing factors is lacking, the changes in cell | |||
functions -- a sort of pre-inflammatory state -- activate corrective processes. Energy depletion itself is an | |||
excitatory state, that calls for increased fuel and oxygen. But when cells are exposed to PUFA, their ability to | |||
use glucose is blocked, increasing their exposure to the fats. Saturated fats activate the pyruvate | |||
dehydrogenase enzyme that is essential for the efficient use of glucose, while PUFA block it. (The MRL mouse | |||
strain has a high regenerative ability, associated with a retained tendency to metabolize glucose rather than | |||
fatty acids.) The negative energetic effects of PUFA include interfering with thyroid and progesterone. The | |||
energy resources are suppressed, at the same time that the inflammatory signals are amplified, and many | |||
regulatory pathways (including the replenishment of NAD from tryptophan) are diverted.In the fetus, especially | |||
before the fats from the mother"s diet begin to accumulate, signals from injured tissue produce the changes that | |||
lead quickly to repair of the damage, but during subsequent life, similar signals produce incomplete repairs, | |||
and as they are ineffective they tend to be intensified and repeated, and eventually the faulty repair processes | |||
become the main problem. Although this is an ecological problem, it is possible to decrease the damage by | |||
avoiding the polyunsaturated fats and the many toxins that synergize with them, while increasing glucose, | |||
niacinamide, carbon dioxide, and other factors that support high energy metabolism, including adequate exposure | |||
to long wavelength light and avoidance of harmful radiation. As long as the toxic factors are present, increased | |||
amounts of protective factors such as progesterone, thyroid, sugar, niacinamide, and carbon dioxide can be used | |||
therapeutically and preventively. <span style="white-space: pre-wrap"> </span> | |||
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Cavallini G, Masini M, Vittorini S, Chantret I, Codogno P, Bergamini E.Biochim Biophys Acta. 2004 Nov | |||
8;1686(1-2):118-24. <strong>Differential effects of dietary fatty acids on rat liver | |||
alpha-amino-beta-carboxymuconate-epsilon-semialdehyde decarboxylase activity and gene expression.</strong> | |||
Egashira Y, Murotani G, Tanabe A, Saito K, Uehara K, Morise A, Sato M, Sanada H. Hepatic | |||
alpha-amino-beta-carboxymuconate-epsilon-semialdehyde decarboxylase (ACMSD; formerly termed picolinic | |||
carboxylase) [EC4.1.1.45] plays a key role in regulating NAD biosynthesis and the generation of quinolinate | |||
(quinolinic acid) from tryptophan. Quinolinate is a potent endogenous excitotoxin of neuronal cells. We | |||
previously reported that ingestion of fatty acids by rats leads to a decrease in their hepatic ACMSD activity. | |||
However, the mechanism of this phenomenon is not clarified. We previously purified ACMSD and cloned cDNA | |||
encoding rat ACMSD. Therefore, in this study, we examined the differential effect of fatty acids on ACMSD mRNA | |||
expression by Northern blot. Moreover, we measured quinolinic acid concentration in rats fed on fatty acid. When | |||
diets containing 2% level of fatty acid were given to male Sprague-Dawley rats (4 weeks old) for 8 days, | |||
long-chain saturated fatty acids and oleic acid did not affect ACMSD mRNA expression in the liver. | |||
Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) strongly suppressed the liver ACMSD mRNA expression. | |||
In<strong> | |||
rats fed with high linoleic acid diet for 8 days, serum quinolinic acid was significantly increased as | |||
compared with the rats fed on a fatty acid-free diet under the condition of the approximately same calorie | |||
ingestion.</strong> These results suggest that the transcription level of ACMSD is modulated by | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids, and suppressive potency of ACMSD mRNA is n-3 fatty acid family>linoleic acid | |||
(n-6 fatty acid)>saturated fatty acid. Moreover, this study provides the information that a high | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acid diet affects the production of quinolinic acid in serum by suppressing the ACMSD | |||
activity.Int J Vitam Nutr Res. 2007 Mar;77(2):142-8. <strong>Dietary protein level and dietary interaction | |||
affect quinolinic acid concentration in rats.</strong> Egashira Y, Sato M, Saito K, Sanada H. "In this | |||
study, we examined whether dietary protein level, fatty acid type, namely saturated fatty acid and | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acid, and their interaction affect serum quinolinic acid concentration in rats." Male | |||
Sprague-Dawley rats (4-weeks old) were fed with 20% casein + 10% stearic acid diet (20C10S), 20% casein + 10% | |||
linoleic acid diet (20C10L), 40% casein + 10% stearic acid diet (40C10S), or<strong> | |||
40% casein + 10% linoleic acid diet (40C10L) | |||
</strong>for 8 days, and serum quinolinic acid concentration and ACMSD activity were determined. Serum | |||
quinolinic acid <strong>concentration was significantly increased in the 40C10L</strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<strong>Increased serum QA concentrations are probably due to a decreased ACMSD activity.</strong>Biochim | |||
Biophys Acta. 2004 Nov 8;1686(1-2):118-24. <strong>Differential effects of dietary fatty acids on rat liver | |||
alpha-amino-beta-carboxymuconate-epsilon-semialdehyde decarboxylase activity and gene expression.</strong> | |||
Egashira Y, Murotani G, Tanabe A, Saito K, Uehara K, Morise A, Sato M, Sanada H.Int J Vitam Nutr Res. 2007 | |||
Mar;77(2):142-8. <strong>Dietary protein level and dietary interaction affect quinolinic acid concentration in | |||
rats.</strong> Egashira Y, Sato M, Saito K, Sanada H.Comp Biochem Physiol A Physiol. 1995 Aug;111(4):539-45. | |||
<strong>Effect of dietary linoleic acid on the tryptophan-niacin metabolism in streptozotocin diabetic rats. | |||
</strong>Egashira Y, Nakazawa A, Ohta T, Shibata K, Sanada H.Adv Exp Med Biol. 2003;527:671-4. <strong>Dietary | |||
linoleic acid suppresses gene expression of rat liver alpha-amino-beta-carboxymuconate-epsilon-semialdehyde | |||
decarboxylase (ACMSD) and increases quinolinic acid in serum.</strong> Egashira Y, Sato M, Tanabe A, Saito | |||
K, Fujigaki S, Sanada H.J Clin Invest. 1994 Mar;93(3):1063-70. <strong>Neutrophil migration inhibitory | |||
properties of polyunsaturated fatty acids. The role of fatty acid structure, metabolism, and possible second | |||
messenger systems.</strong> Ferrante A, Goh D, Harvey DP, Robinson BS, Hii CS, Bates EJ, Hardy SJ, Johnson | |||
DW, Poulos A.Clin Invest Med. 2008;31(3):E106-16. <strong>Hyaluronan oligosaccharides are potential stimulators | |||
to angiogenesis via RHAMM mediated signal pathway in wound healing.</strong> Gao F, Yang CX, Mo W, Liu YW, | |||
He YQ.Pharmacol Res Commun. 1978 Jul;10(7):643-56. <strong>Role of ACTH on the effect of medroxyprogesterone in | |||
brain stem serotonin.</strong> Izquierdo JA, Savini C, Borghi E, Rabiller G, Costas S, Justel E.Postepy Hig | |||
Med Dosw (Online). 2007 Nov 19;61:683-9. <strong>[Hyaluronan-mediated regulation of inflammation] | |||
</strong>[Article in Polish] Krasinski R, Tch"rzewski H.J Pediatr Surg. 1987 Jul;22(7):640-4. Fetal response to | |||
injury in the rabbit. Krummel TM, Nelson JM, Diegelmann RF, Lindblad WJ, Salzberg AM, Greenfield LJ, Cohen | |||
IK.Acta Haematol. 1980;63(4):185-90. <strong>Thrombocytopenia in Graves' disease: effect of T3 on platelet | |||
kinetics. | |||
</strong>Kurata Y, Nishioeda Y, Tsubakio T, Kitani T.Clin Chim Acta. 1977 Sep 1;79(2):479-87. <strong>Influence | |||
of glucose and inhibitors of glycolysis on release of total proteins and enzymes from human | |||
leukocytes.</strong> Lahrichi M, Tarallo P, Houpert Y, Siest G.Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol. 2005 | |||
Jul;289(1):L96-L103. Epub 2005 Mar 18.<strong> | |||
Effect of CO2 on LPS-induced cytokine responses in rat alveolar macrophages.</strong> Lang CJ, Dong P, | |||
Hosszu EK, Doyle IR.J Pediatr Surg. 1999 May;34(5):695-700. <strong>TGF-beta1 alters the healing of cutaneous | |||
fetal excisional wounds.</strong> Lanning DA, Nwomeh BC, Montante SJ, Yager DR, Diegelmann RF, Haynes | |||
JH.Restor Neurol Neurosci. 2002;20(5):181-7. <strong>Experimental hyperthyroidism increases the effectiveness of | |||
predegenerated peripheral nerve graft implantation into hippocampus of adult rats.</strong> Lewin-Kowalik J, | |||
Golka B, Larysz-Brysz M, Swiech-Sabuda E, Granek A.Am J Vet Res. 1977 Oct;38(10):1657-9. <strong>Influence in | |||
rats of dietary fats during the perinatal period: effects upon development and behavior of dams and | |||
offspring.</strong> Liu YL, Borgman RF.Intensive Care Med. 2009 Jan;35(1):129-35. <strong>Hypercapnic | |||
acidosis minimizes endotoxin-induced gut mucosal injury in rabbits.</strong> Morisaki H, Yajima S, Watanabe | |||
Y, Suzuki T, Yamamoto M, Katori N, Hashiguchi S, Takeda J.Int J Tissue React. 1993;15(4):151-6.<strong> | |||
Effects of prostaglandins and indomethacin on the cellular inflammatory response following surgical trauma | |||
in fetal rabbits.</strong> Morykwas MJ, Perry SL, Argenta LC.Bull World Health Organ. 1970;43(5):651-61. | |||
<strong>The influence of sex, age, synthetic oestrogens, progestogens and oral contraceptives on the excretion | |||
of urinary tryptophan metabolites.</strong> Moursi GE, Abdel-Daim MH, Kelada NL, Abdel-Tawab GA, Girgis | |||
LH.Int J Dev Neurosci. 2007 Dec;25(8):499-508. <strong>Signal transduction pathways associated with ATP-induced | |||
proliferation of cell progenitors in the intact embryonic retina.</strong> Nunes PH, Calaza Kda C, | |||
Albuquerque LM, Fragel-Madeira L, Sholl-Franco A, Ventura AL.Mikrobiyol Bul. 2006 Oct;40(4):325-32. <strong | |||
>[Histologic demonstration of adrenal macrophages as a member of mononuclear phagocytic system in guinea pig | |||
models]</strong> [Article in Turkish] Ozbek A, Ozbek E.Prostaglandins. 1977 Oct;14(4):709-14.<strong> | |||
Increased collagen metabolism in granulomata induced in rats deficient in endogenous prostaglandin | |||
precursors.</strong> Parnham MJ, Shoshan S, Bonta IL, Neiman-Wollner S.Intensive Care Med. 2010 | |||
May;36(5):869-78. Epub 2010 Mar 6.<strong> Hypercapnic acidosis in ventilator-induced lung injury.</strong> | |||
Peltekova V, Engelberts D, Otulakowski G, Uematsu S, Post M, Kavanagh BP.J Surg Res. 2009 Jan;151(1):40-7. Epub | |||
2008 Apr 23. <strong>Heated and humidified CO2 prevents hypothermia, peritoneal injury, and intra-abdominal | |||
adhesions during prolonged laparoscopic insufflations.</strong> Peng Y, Zheng M, Ye Q, Chen X, Yu B, Liu | |||
B.Med Hypotheses. 2009 Oct;73(4):521-3. Epub 2009 Jul 8. <strong>Intraoperative field flooding with warm | |||
humidified CO2 may help to prevent adhesion formation after open surgery.</strong> Persson M, van der Linden | |||
J.British Medical Journal 1961 Feb. 4, 1:364. <strong>Keloids after B.C.G.</strong> Ranganathan KS.CNS Drugs. | |||
2002;16(2):129-37. <strong>Is attention deficit hyperactivity disorder increasing among girls in the US? Trends | |||
in diagnosis and the prescribing of stimulants.</strong> Robison LM, Skaer TL, Sclar DA, Galin RS.Adv Exp | |||
Med Biol. 2003;527:435-41. <strong>Increase in conversion of tryptophan to niacin in pregnant rats. | |||
</strong>Shibata K, Fukuwatari T, Murakami M, Sasaki R.Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 1980 Aug;19(8):983-6. <strong | |||
>The effects of aging and inflammation on corneal endothelial wound healing in rabbits.</strong>Staatz WD, Van | |||
Horn DL.Pediatr Surg Int. 2001 May;17(4):254-8.<strong> | |||
Polyunsaturated fatty acids influence neonatal monocyte survival. | |||
</strong>Sweeney B, Puri P, Reen DJ. "PUFAs modulate apoptosis of certain tumour cells and cell lines. | |||
Monocytes, which are major effector cells of the innate immune system, play a central role in the initiation, | |||
development, and outcome of the immune response. They are crucial in the defence against invading pathogens and | |||
are involved in the lysis of infected or malignant cells, wound healing,<strong> </strong>repair, and remodeling | |||
of tissues. In the present study we investigated whether PUFAs might evoke apoptosis in newborn monocytes." "In | |||
the absence of fatty acids, 30 +/- 4% of control cord monocytes underwent apoptosis or necrosis after 24 h | |||
incubation. At a concentration of 50 microM, none of the PUFAs had a significant effect on monocyte cell | |||
death,<strong>but at a dose of 100 microM, DHA resulted in 60 +/- 4% cell death (P < 0.05) while the other | |||
PUFAs had no significant effect. In contrast, at higher concentrations (200 microM), all the PUFAs | |||
significantly increased monocyte cell death (AA: 70 +/- 5%, DHA: 86 | |||
</strong>+/- 2%, EPA: 70 +/- 4%). PUFAs thus exert a potent influence on cord monocyte cell survival in vitro. | |||
Their effect is dose-dependent and DHA appears to be the most potent of the fatty acids tested. The influence of | |||
PUFAs on neonatal monocyte-cell survival suggests a novel mechanism whereby PUFAs may modulate the immune | |||
response."J Cell Mol Med. 2007 Nov-Dec;11(6):1342-51. <strong>Differential cytokine activity and morphology | |||
during wound healing in the neonatal and adult rat skin. | |||
</strong>Wagner W, Wehrmann M.Pharmacol Res Commun. 1978 Jul;10(7):643-56. <strong>Role of ACTH on the effect of | |||
medroxyprogesterone in brain stem serotonin.</strong> Izquierdo JA, Savini C, Borghi E, Rabiller G, Costas | |||
S, Justel E.J Cell Mol Med. 2007 Nov-Dec;11(6):1342-51. <strong>Differential cytokine activity and morphology | |||
during wound healing in the neonatal and adult rat skin. | |||
</strong>Wagner W, Wehrmann M.Plast Reconstr Surg. 2002 Jun;109(7):2355-62. <strong>The fetal cleft palate: III. | |||
Ultrastructural and functional analysis of palatal development following in utero repair of the congenital | |||
model.</strong> Weinzweig J, Panter KE, Spangenberger A, Harper JS, McRae R, Edstrom LE.Z Mikrosk Anat | |||
Forsch 1970 Jan. 82(2): 149-71. <strong>[Experimental studies on the regeneration of the telencephalon of | |||
Ambystoma mexicanum after the resection of both hemispheres]</strong> E Winkelmann, A Winkelmann.Am J | |||
Physiol Cell Physiol. 2010 Mar;298(3):C457-64. <strong>Shockwaves increase T-cell proliferation and IL-2 | |||
expression through ATP release, P2X7 receptors, and FAK activation.</strong> Yu T, Junger WG, Yuan C, Jin A, | |||
Zhao Y, Zheng X, Zeng Y, Liu J.<p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2012. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<head><title>RU486, Cancer, Estrogen, and Progesterone.</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
RU486, Cancer, Estrogen, and Progesterone. | |||
</h1> | |||
Recently many people have been disturbed by reading claims that progesterone can cause cancer, or diabetes, or | |||
autoimmune diseases, or heart disease, or Alzheimer's disease. A flurry of press conferences, and a few groups | |||
of "molecular biologists" working on "progesterone receptors," and the results of studies in which Prempro | |||
(containing a synthetic "progestin") increased breast cancer, have created great confusion and concern, at least | |||
in the English speaking countries. <p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Wyeth, the manufacturer of Prempro, has been highly motivated to recover their sales and profits that | |||
declined about 70% in the first two years after the Women's Health Initiative announced its results. When | |||
billions of dollars in profits are involved, clever public relations can achieve marvelous things. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Women and other mammals that are <strong><em>deficient</em></strong> in progesterone, and/or that have an | |||
excess of estrogen, have a higher than average incidence of cancer. Animal experiments have shown that | |||
administering progesterone could prevent cancer. Cells in the most cancer-susceptible tissues proliferate in | |||
proportion to the ratio of estrogen to progesterone. When the estrogen dominance persists for a long time | |||
without interruption, there are progressive distortions in the structure of the responsive organs--the | |||
uterus, breast, pituitary, lung, liver, kidney, brain, and other organs--and those structural distortions | |||
tend to progress gradually from fibroses to cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As a result of the early studies in both humans and animals, progesterone was used by many physicians to | |||
treat the types of cancer that were clearly caused by estrogen, especially uterine, breast, and kidney | |||
cancers. But by the 1950s, the drug industry had created the myth that their patented synthetic analogs of | |||
progesterone were medically more effective than progesterone itself, and the result has been that | |||
medroxyprogesterone acetate and other synthetics have been widely used to treat women's cancers, including | |||
breast cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Unfortunately, those synthetic compounds have a variety of functions unlike progesterone, including some | |||
estrogenic and/or androgenic and/or glucocorticoid and/or antiprogesterone functions, besides other special, | |||
idiosyncratic side effects. The rationale for their use was that they were "like progesterone, only better." | |||
The unpleasant and unwanted truth is that, as a group, they are seriously carcinogenic, besides being toxic | |||
in a variety of other ways. Thousands of researchers have drawn conclusions about the effects of | |||
progesterone on the basis of their experiments with a synthetic progestin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The earliest studies of estrogen and progesterone in the 1930s had the great advantage of a scientific | |||
culture that was relatively unpolluted by the pharmaceutical industry. As described by Carla Rothenberg, the | |||
massive manipulation of the medical, regulatory, and scientific culture by the estrogen industry began in | |||
1941. After that, the role of metaphysics, word magic, and epicycle-like models increasingly replaced | |||
empirical science in endocrinology and cell physiology. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As the estrogen industry began losing billions of dollars a year following the 2002 report from the Women's | |||
Health Initiative regarding estrogen's toxicity, and as it was noticed that progesterone sales had increased | |||
more than 100-fold, it was clear what had to be done--the toxic effects of estrogen had to be transferred to | |||
progesterone. For more than 50 years, progesterone was recognized to be antimitotic and anti-inflammatory | |||
and anticarcinogenic, but suddenly it has become a mitogenic pro-inflammatory carcinogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Science used to involve confirmation or refutation of published results and conclusions. A different | |||
experimenter, using the technique described in a publication, would often get a different result, and a | |||
dialog or disputation would develop, sometimes continuing for years, before consensus was achieved, though | |||
many times there would be no clear conclusion or consensus. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In that traditional scientific environment, it was customary to recognize that a certain position remained | |||
hypothetical and controversial until some new technique or insight settled the question with some degree of | |||
clarity and decisiveness. People who cherry-picked studies to support their position, while ignoring | |||
contradictory evidence, were violating the basic scientific principles of tentativeness and reasonableness. | |||
Contradictory, as well as confirmatory, data have to be considered. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But when a single experiment involves several people working for a year or more, at a cost of a million or | |||
more dollars, who is going to finance an experiment that "would merely confirm" those results? The newly | |||
developed techniques for identifying specific molecules are often very elaborate and expensive, and as a | |||
result only a few kinds of molecule are usually investigated in each experiment. The results are open to | |||
various interpretations, and most of those interpretations depend on results from other studies, whose | |||
techniques, results, and conclusions have never been challenged, either. There is no significant source of | |||
funding to challenge the programs of the pharmaceutical industry. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The result is that the pronouncements of the principal investigator, and the repetitions of those | |||
conclusions in the mass media, create a culture of opinion, without the foundation of multiple confirmations | |||
that used to be part of the scientific process. The process has taken on many of the features of a cult, in | |||
which received opinions are repeatedly reinforced by the investment of money and authority. Newspaper | |||
reporters know that the team of investigators spent two years on their project, and the lead investigator | |||
wears a white lab coat during the interview, so the reporters don't notice that the investigators' | |||
conclusion is a non sequitur, supported by chains of non sequiturs. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The public gets most of its information about science from the mass media, and the increasingly concentrated | |||
ownership of the media contributes to the use of scientific news as an adjunct to their main business, | |||
advertising and product promotion. The pharmaceutical industry spends billions of dollars annually on | |||
direct-to-consumer advertising, so the big scientific news, for the media, is likely to be anything that | |||
will increase their advertising revenue. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Social-economic cults often simplify the thought processes required by the participants, by inventing a | |||
scapegoat. The estrogen cult has decided that progesterone will be its scapegoat. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hans Selye argued that steroid hormones should be named by their origin, or by their chemical structural | |||
names, rather than their effects, because each hormone has innumerable effects. To name a substance | |||
according to its effects is to predict and to foreordain the discoveries that will be made regarding its | |||
effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The common system of hormonal names according to their putative effects has allowed ideology and | |||
metaphysical ideas to dominate endocrinology. The worst example of metaphysical medicine was the use, for | |||
more than 50 years, of "estrogen, the female hormone" to treat prostate cancer, in the belief that "male | |||
hormones" cause the cancer, and that the female hormone would negate it. This word magic led to a vast | |||
psychotic medical endeavor, that has only recently been reconsidered. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Within the scheme of hormones understood according to their names, "hormone receptors" were proposed to be | |||
the mechanism by which hormones produced their effects. Each hormone had a receptor. If another substance | |||
bound more strongly than the hormone to its receptor, without producing the effects of the hormone, it was | |||
called an antihormone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The industry of synthetic hormones used the ideology of unitary hormonal action to identify new substances | |||
as pharmaceutical hormones, that were always in some way said to be better than the natural hormones--for | |||
example by being "orally active," unlike natural hormones, supposedly. Physicians docilely went along with | |||
whatever the drug salesmen told them. If a drug was classified as a "progestin" by a single reaction in one | |||
animal tissue, then it had a metaphysical identity with the natural hormone, except that it was better, and | |||
patentable. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The natural hormones eventually were assigned any of the toxic properties that were observed for the | |||
pharmaceutical products "in their class." If synthetic progestins caused heart disease, birth defects, and | |||
cancer, then the "natural progestin" was assumed to do that, too. It's important to realize the impact of | |||
logical fallacies on the medical culture. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Like the hormones themselves, which metaphysically supposedly acted upon one receptor, to activate one gene | |||
(or set of genes), the antihormones came to be stereotyped. If a particular hormonal action was blocked by a | |||
chemical, then that substance became an antagonistic antihormone, and when its administration produced an | |||
effect, that effect was taken to be the result of blocking the hormone for which it was "the antagonist." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The "antiprogesterone" molecule, RU486, besides having some progesterone-like and antiestrogenic properties, | |||
also has (according to Hackenberg, et al., 1996). some androgenic, antiandrogenic, and antiglucocorticoid | |||
properties. Experiments in which it is used might have pharmaceutical meaning, but they so far have very | |||
little clear biological meaning. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Adding to the conceptual sloppiness of the "molecular biology" wing of endocrinology, the culture in which | |||
pharmaceutical products had come to dominate medical ideas about hormones allowed the conventional | |||
pharmaceutical vehicles to be disregarded in most experiments, both <em>in vitro</em> | |||
and <em>in vivo</em>. If progesterone was injected into patients mixed with sesame oil and benzyl alcohol, | |||
then it often didn't occur to animal experimenters to give control injections of the solvent. For <em>in | |||
vitro</em> | |||
studies, in a watery medium, oil wouldn't do, so they would use an alcohol solvent, and again often forgot | |||
to do a solvent control experiment. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The importance of the solvent was seen by an experimenter studying the effect of vitamin E on age pigment in | |||
nerves. It occurred to that experimenter to test the ethyl alcohol alone, and he found that it produced | |||
almost the same effect as that produced by the solution of alcohol and vitamin E. Workers with hormones | |||
often just assume that a little alcohol wouldn't affect their system. But when the effects of alcohol by | |||
itself have been studied, many of the effects produced by very low concentrations happen to be the same | |||
effects that have been ascribed to hormones, such as progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In some cases, the solvent allows the hormone to crystallize, especially if the solvent is water-miscible, | |||
and fails to distribute it evenly through the medium and cells as the experimenter assumed would happen, and | |||
so the experimenter reports that the hormone is not effective in that kind of cell, even though the hormone | |||
didn't reach the cells in the amount intended. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
These are four of the common sources of error about progesterone: (1) Saying that progesterone has produced | |||
an effect which was produced by a different substance. (2) Saying that progesterone is the cause of a | |||
certain effect, if an "anti-progesterone" chemical prevents that effect. (3) Saying that progesterone caused | |||
something, when in fact the solvent caused it. And (4) saying that progesterone fails to do something, when | |||
progesterone hasn't been delivered to the system being studied. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many years ago, experimenters who wanted to minimize the problems involved in administering progesterone in | |||
toxic solvents found that, with careful effort, progesterone could be transferred to a protein, such as | |||
albumin, and that the albumin-progesterone complex could be washed to remove the solvent. In this form, the | |||
progesterone can be delivered to cells in a form that isn't radically different from the form in which it | |||
naturally circulates in the body. Apparently, the labor involved discourages the widespread use of this | |||
technique. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although the industry's early generalizations about estrogen and progesterone, defining them as "the female | |||
hormone" and "the pregnancy hormone," were radically mistaken, some useful generalizations about their | |||
effects were gradually being built up during the first few decades in which their chemical and physiological | |||
properties were studied. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen's name, derived from the gadfly, accurately suggests its role as an excitant, getting things | |||
started. Progesterone's name, relating to pregnancy, is compatible with thinking of it as an agent of | |||
calming and fulfillment. But these properties show up in every aspect of physiology, and the special cases | |||
of female estrus and pregnancy can be properly understood only in the larger context, in which, for example, | |||
progesterone is a brain hormone in both sexes and at all ages, and estrogen is an essential male hormone | |||
involved in the sperm cell's function and male libido.<em> </em> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Progesterone can, without estrogen, create the uterine conditions for implantation of an embryo (Piccini, | |||
2005, progesterone induces LIF; Sherwin, et al., 2004, LIF can substitute for estrogen), and it has many | |||
other features that can be considered apart from estrogen, such as its regulation of salts, energy | |||
metabolism, protein metabolism, immunity, stress, and inflammation, but without understanding its opposition | |||
to estrogen, there will be no coherent understanding of progesterone's biological meaning. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Both estrogen and progesterone are hydrophobic molecules (progesterone much more so than estrogen) which | |||
bind with some affinity to many components of cells. Certain proteins that strongly bind the hormones are | |||
called their receptors. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cells respond to stimulation by estrogen by producing a variety of molecules, including the "progesterone | |||
receptor" protein. When progesterone enters the cell, binding to these proteins, the estrogenic stimulation | |||
is halted, by a series of reactions in which the estrogen receptors disintegrate, and in which estrogen is | |||
made water soluble by the activation of enzymes that attach sulfate or a sugar acid, causing it leave the | |||
cell and move into the bloodstream, and by reactions that prevent its reentry into the cell by inactivating | |||
another type of enzyme, and that suppress its <em>de novo</em> formation in the cell, and that oxidize it | |||
into a less active form. Progesterone terminates estrogen's cellular functions with extreme thoroughness. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A recent publication in <em>Science </em> | |||
("Prevention of Brca1-mediated mammary tumorigenesis in mice by a progesterone antagonist," Poole, et al., | |||
Dec. 1, 2006), with associated press conferences, reported an experiment in which a special kind of mouse | |||
was prepared, which lacked two tumor-suppressing genes called BRCA and p53. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the functions of the BRCA gene product is to repair genetic damage, and another function is to (like | |||
progesterone) suppress the estrogen receptor and its functions. Estrogen, and some environmental | |||
carcinogens, can suppress the BRCA gene product. Estrogen can also turn off the tumor suppressor protein, | |||
p53. So it is interesting that a group of experimenters chose to produce a mouse that lacked both the normal | |||
BRCA and p53 genes. They had a mouse that was designed to unleash estrogen's effects, and that modeled some | |||
of the features of estrogen toxicity and progesterone deficiency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This mouse, lacking an essential gene that would allow progesterone to function normally, probably affecting | |||
progesterone's ability to eliminate the estrogen receptor, also lacked the tumor suppressor gene p53, which | |||
is required for luteinization (Cherian-Shaw 2004);<strong> | |||
in its absence, progesterone synthesis is decreased,</strong> | |||
<strong>estrogen synthesis is increased.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
(Chen, Y, et al., 1999<strong>:</strong> BRCA represses the actions of estrogen and its receptor, and, like | |||
progesterone, activates the p21 promoter, which inhibits cell proliferation. Aspirin and vitamin D also act | |||
through p21.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The mutant BRCA gene prevents the cell, even in the presence of progesterone, from turning off estrogen's | |||
effects the way it should. The antiestrogenic RU486 (some articles below), which has some of progesterone's | |||
effects (including therapeutic actions against endometrial and breast cancer), appears to overcome some of | |||
the effects of that mutation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It might have been proper to describe the engineered mouse that lacked both the BRCA and the p53 genes as a | |||
mouse in which the effects of estrogen excess and progesterone deficiency would be especially pronounced and | |||
deadly. To speak of progesterone as contributing to the development of cancer in that specially designed | |||
mouse goes far beyond bad science. However, that study makes sense if it is seen as preparation for the | |||
promotion of a new drug similar in effect to RU486, to prevent breast cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The study's lead author, Eva Lee, quoted by a university publicist, said "We found that progesterone plays a | |||
role in the development of breast cancer by encouraging the proliferation of mammary cells that carry a | |||
breast cancer gene." But they didn't measure the amount of progesterone present in the animals. They didn't | |||
"find" anything at all about progesterone. The "anti-progesterone" drug they used has been used for many | |||
years to treat uterine, ovarian, and breast cancers, in some cases <em>with</em> progesterone, to intensify | |||
its effects, and its protective effects are very likely the result of its antiestrogenic and anti-cortisol | |||
effects, both of which are well established, and relevant. In some cases, it acts like progesterone, only | |||
more strongly. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Other more specific progesterone blockers are under development," Lee notes. And the article in <em | |||
>Science</em> magazine looks like nothing more than the first advertisement for one that her husband, | |||
Wen-Hwa Lee, has designed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
According to publicists at the University of California, Irvine, "Lee plans to focus his research on | |||
developing new compounds that will disrupt end-stage cancer cells. The goal is a small molecule that, when | |||
injected into the blood stream, will act as something of a biological cruise missile to target, shock and | |||
awe the cancerous cells." "In this research, he will make valuable use of a breast cancer model developed by | |||
his wife." "She developed the model, and I will develop the molecule," Lee says. "We can use this model to | |||
test a new drug and how it works in combination with old drugs." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Previously we blamed everything," Lee says of his eye cancer discovery. "We blamed electricity, we blamed | |||
too much sausage - but in this case it's clear: It's the gene's fault." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The things that these people know, demonstrated by previous publications, but that they don't say in the <em | |||
>Science</em> article, are very revealing. The retinoblastoma gene (and its protein product), a specialty of | |||
Wen-Hwa Lee, is widely known to be a factor in breast cancer, and to be responsive to progesterone, RU486, | |||
and p21. Its links to ubiquitin, the hormone receptors, proteasomes, and the BRCA gene are well known, but | |||
previously they were seen as linking estrogen to cell proliferation, and progesterone to the inhibition of | |||
cellular proliferation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By organizing their claims around the idea that RU486 is acting as an antiprogesterone, rather than as a | |||
progesterone synergist in opposing estrogen, Eva Lee's team has misused words to argue that it is | |||
progesterone, rather than estrogen, that causes breast cancer. Of the many relevant issues that their | |||
publication ignores, the absence of measurements of the actual estrogen and progesterone in the animals' | |||
serum most strongly suggests that the project was not designed for proper scientific purposes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
They chose to use techniques that are perfectly inappropriate for showing what they claim to show. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the second paragraph of their article, Poole, et al., say "Hormone replacement therapy with progesterone | |||
and estrogen, but not estrogen alone, has been associated with an elevation risk in postmenopausal women." | |||
Aside from the gross inaccuracy of saying "progesterone," rather than synthetic progestin, they phrase their | |||
comment about "estrogen alone" in a way that suggests an identity of purpose with the estrogen industry | |||
apologists, who have been manipulating the data from the WHI estrogen-only study, clearly to lay the blame | |||
on progesterone. (Women who took estrogen had many more surgeries to remove mammographically abnormal breast | |||
tissue. This would easily account for fewer minor cancer diagnoses; despite this, there were more advanced | |||
cancers in the estrogen group.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While the Poole, et al., group are operating within a context of new views regarding estrogen, progesterone, | |||
and cancer, they are ignoring the greater part of contemporary thinking about cancer, a consensus that has | |||
been growing for over 70 years<strong>:</strong> All of the factors that produce cancer, including breast | |||
cancer, produce inflammation and cellular excitation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Progesterone is antiinflammatory, and reduces cellular excitation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Even within their small world of molecular endocrinology, thinking in ways that have been fostered by | |||
computer technology, about gene networks, interacting nodes, and crosstalk between pathways, their model and | |||
their arguments don't work. They have left out the complexity that could give their argument some weight. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The medical mainstream has recognized for 30 years that progesterone protects the uterus against cancer; | |||
that was the reason for adding Provera to the standard menopausal hormonal treatment. The new claim that | |||
natural progesterone causes breast cancer should oblige them to explain why the hormone would have opposite | |||
effects in different organs, but the mechanisms of action of estrogen and progesterone are remarkably | |||
similar in both organs, even when examined at the molecular level. If "molecular endocrinologists" are going | |||
to have interpretations diametrically opposed to classical endocrinology (if black is to be white, if apples | |||
are to fall up), they will have to produce some very interesting evidence. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cancer is a malignant (destructive, invasive) tumor that kills the organism. The main dogma regarding its | |||
nature and origin is that it differs genetically from the host, as a result of mutations. Estrogen causes | |||
mutations and other forms of genetic instability, as well as cancer itself. Progesterone doesn't harm genes | |||
or cause genetic instability. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The speculative anti-progesterone school has put great emphasis on the issue of cellular proliferation, with | |||
the reasoning that proliferating cells are more likely to undergo genetic changes. And synthetic progestins | |||
often do imitate estrogen and increase cellular proliferation. People like the Lees are asserting as an | |||
established fact that progesterone increases cellular proliferation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A paper by Soderqvist has been cited as proof that progesterone increases the proliferation of breast cells. | |||
He saw more mitoses in the breasts during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle, and said the slightly | |||
increased mitotic rate was "associated with" progesterone. Of course, estrogen increased at the same time, | |||
and estrogen causes sustained proliferation of breast cells, while progesterone stimulation causes only two | |||
cell divisions, ending with the differentiation of the cell. (Groshong, et al., 1997, Owen, et al., 1998) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the ways that progesterone stops proliferation and promotes differentiation is by keeping the | |||
retinoblastoma protein in its unphosphorylated, active protective state (Gizard, et al., 2006) The effects | |||
of estrogen and progesterone on that protein are reciprocal (Chen, et al., 2005). It's hard for me to | |||
imagine that the Lees don't know about these hormonal effects on Wen-Hwa's retinoblastoma gene product. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The inactivation of that protein by hyperphosphorylation is part of a general biological process, in which | |||
activation of a cell (by injury or nervous or hormonal or other stimulation, including radiation) leads to | |||
the activation of a large group of about 500 enzymes, phosphorylases, which amplify the stimulation, and | |||
cause the cell to respond by becoming active in many ways, for example, by stopping the synthesis of | |||
glycogen, and beginning its conversion to glucose to provide energy for the adaptive responses, that include | |||
the activation of genes and the synthesis or destruction of proteins. Another set of enzymes, the | |||
phosphatases, remove the activating phosphate groups, and allow the cell to return to its resting state. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The "molecular" endocrinologists and geneticists are committed to a reductionist view of life, the view that | |||
DNA is the essence, the secret, of life, and that it controls cells through its interactions with smaller | |||
molecules, such as the hormone receptors. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The idea of hormone receptors can be traced directly to the work of Elwood Jensen, who started his career | |||
working in chemical warfare, at the University of Chicago. Jensen claims that an experiment he did in the | |||
1950s "caused the demise" of the enzymic-redox theory of estrogen's action, by showing that uterine tissue | |||
can't oxidize estradiol, and that its only action is on the genes, by way of "the estrogen receptor." But | |||
the uterus and other tissues do oxidize estradiol, and its cyclic oxidation and reduction is clearly | |||
involved in some of estrogen's toxic and excitatory effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For some reason, the military is still interested in hormone receptors. Lawrence National Weapons Laboratory | |||
(with its giant "predictive science" computer) is now the site of some of the anti-progesterone research. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Molecular biologists have outlined a chain of reactions, starting at the cell surface, and cascading through | |||
a series of phosphorylations, until the genes are activated. The cell surface is important, because cells | |||
are always in contact with something, and their functions and structure must be appropriate for their | |||
location. But the reductionist view of a network of phosphorylating enzymes ignores some facts. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Glycogen phosphorylase was the first enzyme whose activity was shown to be regulated by structural changes, | |||
allosterism. The active form is stabilized by phosphorylation, but this process takes seconds or minutes to | |||
develop, and the enzyme becomes active immediately when the cell is stimulated, for example in muscle | |||
contraction, within milliseconds. This kind of allosteric activation (or inactivation) can be seen in a | |||
variety of other enzymes, the cold-labile enzymes. A coherent change of the cell causes coordinated changes | |||
in its parts. These processes of enzymic regulation are fast, and can occur throughout a cell, practically | |||
simultaneously. Strict reductionists don't like to talk about them. "Network analysis" becomes irrelevant. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While a cell in general is activated by a wave of phosphorylation, certain processes (including glycogen | |||
synthesis) are blocked. When BRCA1 or retinoblastoma protein is hyperphosphorylated, its anti-estrogenic, | |||
anti-proliferative functions are stopped. The communication between cells is another function that's stopped | |||
by injury-induced phosphorylation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen generally activates phosphorylases, and inactivates phosphatases. Progesterone generally opposes | |||
those effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Phosphorylation is just one of the regulatory systems that are relevant to the development of cancer, and | |||
that are acted on oppositely by estrogen and progesterone. To reduce the explanation for cancer to a gene or | |||
two or three may be an attractive idea for molecular endocrinologists, but the idea's simplicity is | |||
delusive. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Each component of the cell contributes complexly to the cell's regulatory stability. Likewise, a drug such | |||
as RU486 complexly modifies the cell's stability, changing thresholds in many ways, some of which synergize | |||
with progesterone (e.g., supporting the GABA system), others of which antagonize progesterone's effects | |||
(e.g., increasing exposure to prostaglandins). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are other proteins in cells, besides the "hormone receptors," that bind progesterone, and that | |||
regulate cell functions globally. The sigma receptor, for example, that interacts with cocaine to excite the | |||
cell, interacts with progesterone to quiet the cell. The sigma receptor is closely related functionally to | |||
the histones, that regulate the activity of chromosomes and DNA, and progesterone regulates many processes | |||
that control the histones. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The GABA receptor system, and the systems that respond to glutamic acid (e.g., the "NMDA receptors") are | |||
involved in the inhibitory and excitatory processes that restrain or accelerate the growth of cancer cells, | |||
and progesterone acts through those systems to quiet cells, and restrain growth. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The inhibitor of differentiation, Id-1, is inhibited by progesterone, activated by estrogen (Lin, et al., | |||
2000). Proteins acting in the opposite direction, PTEN and p21, for example, are activated by progesterone, | |||
and inhibited by estrogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The inflammatory cytokines, acting through the NFkappaB protein to activate genes, are generally oppositely | |||
regulated by estrogen and progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Prostaglandins, platelet activating factor, nitric oxide, peroxidase, lipases, histamine, serotonin, | |||
lactate, insulin, intracellular calcium, carbon dioxide, osmolarity, pH, and the redox environment are all | |||
relevant to cancer, and are affected systemically and locally by estrogen and progesterone in generally | |||
opposing ways. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
About ten years ago, Geron corporation announced that it was developing products to control aging and | |||
cancer, by regulating telomerase, the enzyme that lengthens a piece of DNA at the end of the chromosomes. | |||
Their argument was that telomeres get shorter each time a cell divides, and that after about 50 divisions, | |||
cells reach the limit identified by Leonard Hayflick, and die, and that this accounts for the aging of the | |||
organism. Cancer cells are immortal, they said, because they maintain active telomerase, so the company | |||
proposed to cure cancer, by selling molecules to inhibit the enzyme, and to cure aging, by providing new | |||
enzymes for old people. However, Hayflick's limit was mainly the effect of bad culture methods, and the | |||
theory that the shortening of telomeres causes aging was contradicted by the finding of longer telomeres in | |||
some old people than in some young people, and different telomere lengths in different organs of the same | |||
person. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But it's true that cancer cells have active telomerase, and that most healthy cells don't. It happens that | |||
telomerase is activated by cellular injury, such as radiation, that activates phosphorylases, and that it is | |||
inactivated by phosphatases. Estrogen activates telomerase, and progesterone inhibits it. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Molecular endocrinology is very important to the pharmaceutical industry, because it lends itself so well to | |||
television commercials and corporate stock offerings. Monsanto and the Pentagon believe they can use | |||
reductionist molecular biology to predict, manipulate, and control life processes, but so far it is only | |||
their ability to damage organisms that has been demonstrated. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides the early animal studies that showed experimentally that progesterone can prevent or cure a wide | |||
variety of tumors, the newer evidence showing that progesterone is a major protective factor against even | |||
breast cancer, would suggest that dishonest efforts to protect estrogen sales by preventing women from using | |||
natural progesterone will be causing more women to develop cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The recent report that the incidence of breast cancer in the United States fell drastically between 2002 and | |||
2004, following the great decline in estrogen sales, shows the magnitude of the injury and death caused by | |||
the falsifications of the estrogen industry--a matter of millions of unnecessary deaths, just in the years | |||
that I have been working on the estrogen issue. The current campaign against progesterone can be expected to | |||
cause many unnecessary cancer deaths (e.g., Plu-Bureau, et al., Mauvais-Jarvis, et al.), while distracting | |||
the public from the culpability of the estrogen industry. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Endocrinol. 2003 Oct;179(1):55-62. <strong>Overexpression of wild-type p53 gene renders MCF-7 breast | |||
cancer cells more sensitive to the antiproliferative effect of progesterone. | |||
</strong>Alkhalaf M, El-Mowafy AM. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1985 Apr;60(4):692-7. <strong>RU486, a progestin and glucocorticoid antagonist, | |||
inhibits the growth of breast cancer cells via the progesterone receptor. | |||
</strong> | |||
Bardon S, Vignon F, Chalbos D, Rochefort H. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mol Carcinog. 2003 Dec;38(4):160-9. <strong>Suppression of the transformed phenotype and induction of | |||
differentiation-like characteristics in cultured ovarian tumor cells by chronic treatment with | |||
progesterone.</strong> Blumenthal M, Kardosh A, Dubeau L, Borok Z, Schonthal AH. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Contraception. 1998 Jul;58(1):45-50. <strong>Screening for antiproliferative actions of mifepristone. | |||
Differential endometrial responses of primates versus rats.</strong> Burleigh DW, Williams RF, Gordon K, | |||
Hsiu JG, Hodgen GD. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hum Reprod Update. 1998 Sep-Oct;4(5):570-83. <strong>Modulation of oestrogenic effects by progesterone | |||
antagonists in the rat uterus.</strong> Chwalisz K, Stockemann K, Fritzemeier KH, Fuhrmann U. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Vasc Surg. 2002 Oct;36(4):833-8. <strong>Progesterone inhibits human infragenicular arterial smooth muscle | |||
cell proliferation induced by high glucose and insulin concentrations.</strong> Carmody BJ, Arora S, | |||
Wakefield MC, Weber M, Fox CJ, Sidawy AN. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Cell Physiol. 1999 Dec;181(3):385-92. <strong>Emerging roles of BRCA1 in transcriptional regulation and | |||
DNA repair. | |||
</strong> | |||
Chen Y, Lee WH, Chew HK. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mol Endocrinol. 2005 Aug;19(8):1978-90. <strong>Progesterone inhibits the estrogen-induced phosphoinositide | |||
3-kinase--> AKT--> GSK-3beta--> cyclin D1--> pRB pathway to block uterine epithelial cell | |||
proliferation.</strong> Chen B, Pan H, Zhu L, Deng Y, Pollard JW. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
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Mol Cell Biol. 2006 Oct;26(20):7632-44. <strong>TReP-132 is a novel progesterone receptor coactivator | |||
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DW, Staels B. | |||
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Fertil Steril. 1996 Feb;65(2):323-31. <strong>Antiproliferative effects of low-dose micronized | |||
progesterone.</strong> Kim S, Korhonen M, Wilborn W, Foldesy R, Snipes W, Hodgen GD, Anderson FD. | |||
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transcription." | |||
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progesterone-induced growth inhibition and focal adhesion.</strong> | |||
Lin VC, Woon CT, Aw SE, Guo C. | |||
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Ling MT, Wang X, Zhang X, Wong YC. | |||
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</p> | |||
<p> | |||
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Lipschutz A, Murillo R, and Vargas, L Jr. | |||
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<p> | |||
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Lipschutz A, Vargas L Jr., and Ruz O. | |||
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<p> | |||
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progesterone receptor A form-mediated mechanism.</strong> | |||
McDonnell DP, Goldman ME. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ital J Biochem. 1981 Jul-Aug;30(4):279-89. <strong>Effects of estrogens and progesterone on GABA system in | |||
ovariectomized rat retina.</strong> Macaione S, Ientile R, Lentini M, Di Giorgio RM. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
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ornithine-decarboxylase.</strong> Manni A, Wechter R, Wei L, Heitjan D, Demers L. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann Endocrinol (Paris). 1989;50(3):181-8. <strong>[Antiestrogens and normal human breast cell proliferation] | |||
</strong>Mauvais-Jarvis P, Gompel A, Malet C, | |||
</p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2007. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head> | |||
<title> | |||
Salt, energy, metabolic rate, and longevity | |||
</title> | |||
</head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Salt, energy, metabolic rate, and longevity | |||
</h1> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1950s, when the pharmaceutical industry was beginning to promote some new chemicals as diuretics to | |||
replace the traditional mercury compounds, Walter Kempner"s low-salt "rice diet" began to be discussed in | |||
the medical journals and other media. The diuretics were offered for treating high blood pressure, pulmonary | |||
edema, heart failure, "idiopathic edema," orthostatic edema and obesity, and other forms of water retention, | |||
including pregnancy, and since they functioned by causing sodium to be excreted in the urine, their sale was | |||
accompanied by advising the patients to reduce their salt intake to make the diuretic more effective. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It was clear to some physicians (and to most veterinarians) that salt restriction, especially combined with | |||
salt-losing diuresis, was very harmful during pregnancy, but that combination became standard medical | |||
practice for many years, damaging millions of babies. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Despite numerous publications showing that diuretics could cause the edematous problems that they were | |||
supposed to remedy, they have been one of the most profitable types of drug. Dietary salt restriction has | |||
become a cultural cliché, largely as a consequence of the belief that sodium causes edema and hypertension. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Salt restriction, according to a review of about 100 studies (Alderman, 2004), lowers the blood pressure a | |||
few points. But that generally doesn"t relate to better health. In one study (3000 people, 4 years), there | |||
was a clear increase in mortality in the individuals who ate less salt. An extra few grams of salt per day | |||
was associated with a 36% reduction in "coronary events" (Alderman, et al., 1995). Another study (more than | |||
11,000 people, 22 years) also showed an inverse relation between salt intake and mortality (Alderman, et | |||
al., 1997). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Tom Brewer, an obstetrician who devoted his career to educating the public about the importance of prenatal | |||
nutrition, emphasizing adequate protein (especially milk), calories, and salt, was largely responsible for | |||
the gradual abandonment of the low-salt plus diuretics treatment for pregnant women. He explained that | |||
sodium, in association with serum albumin, is essential for maintaining blood volume. Without adequate | |||
sodium, the serum albumin is unable to keep water from leaving the blood and entering the tissues. The | |||
tissues swell as the volume of blood is reduced. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
During pregnancy, the reduced blood volume doesn"t adequately nourish and oxygenate the growing fetus, and | |||
the reduced circulation to the kidneys causes them to release a signal substance (renin) that causes the | |||
blood to circulate faster, under greater pressure. A low salt diet is just one of the things that can reduce | |||
kidney circulation and stimulate renin production. Bacterial endotoxin, and other things that cause | |||
excessive capillary permeability, edema, or shock-like symptoms, will activate renin secretion. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The blood volume problem isn"t limited to the hypertension of pregnancy toxemia: "Plasma volume is usually | |||
lower in patients with essential hypertension than in normal subjects" (Tarazi, 1976). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Several studies of preeclampsia or toxemia of pregnancy showed that supplementing the diet with salt would | |||
lower the women"s blood pressure, and prevent the other complications associated with toxemia (Shanklin and | |||
Hodin, 1979). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It has been known for many years that decreasing sodium intake causes the body to respond adaptively, | |||
increasing the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS). The activation of this system is recognized as a | |||
factor in hypertension, kidney disease, heart failure, fibrosis of the heart, and other problems. Sodium | |||
restriction also increases serotonin, activity of the sympathetic nervous system, and plasminogen activator | |||
inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1), which contributes to the accumulation of clots and is associated with breast and | |||
prostate cancer. The sympathetic nervous system becomes hyperactive in preeclampsia (Metsaars, et al., | |||
2006). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Despite the general knowledge of the relation of dietary salt to the RAA system, and its application by | |||
Brewer and others to the prevention of pregnancy toxemia, it isn"t common to see the information applied to | |||
other problems, such as aging and the stress-related degenerative diseases. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many young women periodically crave salt and sugar, especially around ovulation and premenstrually, when | |||
estrogen is high. Physiologically, this is similar to the food cravings of pregnancy. Premenstrual water | |||
retention is a common problem, and physicians commonly offer the same advice to cycling women that was | |||
offered as a standard treatment for pregnant women--the avoidance of salt, sometimes with a diuretic. But | |||
when women premenstrually increase their salt intake according to their craving, the water retention can be | |||
prevented. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blood volume changes during the normal menstrual cycle, and when the blood volume is low, it is usually | |||
because the water has moved into the tissues, causing edema. When estrogen is high, the osmolarity of the | |||
blood is low. (Courtar, et al., 2007; Stachenfeld, et al., 1999). Hypothyroidism (which increases the ratio | |||
of estrogen to progesterone) is a major cause of excessive sodium loss. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The increase of adrenalin caused by salt restriction has many harmful effects, including insomnia. Many old | |||
people have noticed that a low sodium diet disturbs their sleep, and that eating their usual amount of salt | |||
restores their ability to sleep. The activity of the sympathetic nervous system increases with aging, so | |||
salt restriction is exacerbating one of the basic problems of aging. Chronically increased activity of the | |||
sympathetic (adrenergic) nervous system contributes to capillary leakage, insulin resistance (with increased | |||
free fatty acids in the blood), and degenerative changes in the brain (Griffith and Sutin, 1996). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The flexibility of blood vessels (compliance) is decreased by a low-salt diet, and vascular stiffness caused | |||
by over-activity of the sympathetic nervous system is considered to be an important factor in hypertension, | |||
especially with aging. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pregnancy toxemia/preeclampsia involves increased blood pressure and capillary permeability, and an excess | |||
of prolactin. Prolactin secretion is increased by serotonin, which is one of the substances increased by | |||
salt restriction, but prolactin itself can promote the loss of sodium in the urine (Ibarra, et al., 2005), | |||
and contributes to vascular leakage and hypertension. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In pregnancy, estrogen excess or progesterone deficiency is an important factor in the harmful effects of | |||
sodium restriction and protein deficiency. A deficiency of protein contributes to hypothyroidism, which is | |||
responsible for the relative estrogen excess. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Protein, salt, thyroid, and progesterone happen to be thermogenic, increasing heat production and | |||
stabilizing body temperature at a higher level. Prolactin and estrogen lower the temperature set-point. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The downward shift of temperature and energy metabolism in toxemia or salt deprivation tends to slow the use | |||
of oxygen, increasing the glycolytic use of sugar, and contributing to the formation of lactic acid, rather | |||
than carbon dioxide. In preeclampsia, serum lactate is increased, even while free fatty acids are | |||
interfering with the use of glucose. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One way of looking at those facts is to see that a lack of sodium slows metabolism, lowers carbon dioxide | |||
production, and creates inflammation, stress and degeneration. Rephrasing it, sodium stimulates energy | |||
metabolism, increases carbon dioxide production, and protects against inflammation and other maladaptive | |||
stress reactions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In recent years, Weissman"s "wear-and-tear" theory of aging, and Pearl"s "rate of living" theory have been | |||
clearly refuted by metabolic studies that are showing that intensified mitochondrial respiration decreases | |||
cellular damage, and supports a longer life-span. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many dog owners are aware that small dogs eat much more food in proportion to their size than big dogs do. | |||
And small dogs have a much greater life expectancy than big dogs, in some cases about twice as long | |||
(Speakman, 2003). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Organisms as different as yeasts and rodents show a similar association of metabolic intensity and | |||
life-span. A variety of hamster with a 20% higher metabolic rate lived 15% longer than hamsters with an | |||
average metabolic rate (Oklejewicz and Daan, 2002). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Individuals within a strain of mice were found to vary considerably in their metabolic rate. The 25% of the | |||
mice with the highest rate used 30% more energy (per gram of body weight) than the 25% with the lowest | |||
metabolic rate, and lived 36% longer (Speakman, et al., 2000). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The mitochondria of these animals are "uncoupled," that is, their use of oxygen isn"t directly proportional | |||
to the production of ATP. This means that they are producing more carbon dioxide without necessarily | |||
producing more ATP, and that even at rest they are using a considerable amount of energy. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One important function of carbon dioxide is to regulate the movement of positively charged alkali metal | |||
ions, such as sodium and calcium. When too much calcium enters a cell it activates many enzymes, prevents | |||
muscle and nerve cells from relaxing, and ultimately kills the cell. The constant formation of acidic carbon | |||
dioxide in the cell allows the cell to remove calcium, along with the small amount of sodium which is | |||
constantly entering the cell. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When there is adequate sodium in the extracellular fluid, the continuous inward movement of sodium ions into | |||
the resting cell activates an enzyme, sodium-potassium ATPase, causing ATP to break down into ADP and | |||
phosphate, which stimulates the consumption of fuel and oxygen to maintain an adequate level of ATP. | |||
Increasing the concentration of sodium increases the energy consumption and carbon dioxide production of the | |||
cell. The sodium, by increasing carbon dioxide production, protects against the excitatory, toxic effects of | |||
the intracellular calcium. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hypertonic solutions, containing more than the normal concentration of sodium (from about twice normal to 8 | |||
or 10 times normal) are being used to rescuscitate people and animals after injury. Rather than just | |||
increasing blood volume to restore circulation, the hypertonic sodium restores cellular energy production, | |||
increasing oxygen consumption and heat production while reducing free radical production, improves the | |||
contraction and relaxation of the heart muscle, and reduces inflammation, vascular permeability, and edema. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Seawater, which is hypertonic to our tissues, has often been used for treating wounds, and much more | |||
concentrated salt solutions have been found effective for accelerating wound healing (Mangete, et al., | |||
1993). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There have been several publications suggesting that increasing the amount of salt in the diet might cause | |||
stomach cancer, because countries such as Japan with a high salt intake have a high incidence of stomach | |||
cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Studies in which animals were fed popular Japanese foods--"salted cuttlefish guts, broiled, salted, dried | |||
sardines, pickled radish, and soy sauce"--besides a chemical carcinogen, showed that the Japanese foods | |||
increased the number of tumors. But another study, adding only soy sauce (with a salt content of about 18%) | |||
to the diet did not increase the incidence of cancer, in another it was protective against stomach cancer | |||
(Benjamin, et al., 1991). Several studies show that dried fish and pickled vegetables are carcinogenic, | |||
probably because of the oxidized fats, and other chemical changes, and fungal contamination, which are | |||
likely to be worse without the salt. Animals fed dried fish were found to have mutagenic urine, apparently | |||
as a result of toxic materials occurring in various preserved foods (Fong, et al., 1979). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although preserved foods develop many peculiar toxins, even fresh fish in the diet have been found to be | |||
associated with increased cancer risk (Phukan, et al., 2006). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When small animals were given a milliliter of a saturated salt solution with the carcinogen, the number of | |||
tumors was increased with the salt. However, when the salt was given with mucin, it had no cancer promoting | |||
effect. Since the large amount of a saturated salt solution breaks down the stomach"s protective mucus | |||
coating, the stomach cells were not protected from the carcinogen. Rather than showing that salt causes | |||
stomach cancer, the experiments showed that a cup or more of saturated salt solution, or several ounces of | |||
pure salt, shouldn"t be ingested at the same time as a strong carcinogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some studies have found pork to be associated with cancer of the esophagous (Nagai, et al., 1982), thyroid | |||
(Markaki, et al., 2003), and other organs, but an experiment with beef, chicken, or bacon diet in rats | |||
provides another perspective on the role of salt in carcinogenesis. After being given a carcinogen, rats | |||
were fed meat diets, containing either 30% or 60% of freeze-dried fried beef, chicken, or bacon. Neither | |||
beef nor chicken changed the incidence of precancerous lesions in the intestine, but the incidence was | |||
reduced by 12% in the animals on the 30% bacon diet, and by 20% in rats getting the diet with 60% bacon. | |||
Salt apparently made the difference. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Other protective effects of increased sodium are that it improves immunity (Junger, et al., 1994), reduces | |||
vascular leakiness, and alleviates inflammation (Cara, et al., 1988). All of these effects would tend to | |||
protect against the degenerative diseases, including tumors, atherosclerosis, and Alzheimer"s disease. The | |||
RAA system appears to be crucially involved in all kinds of sickness and degeneration, but the protective | |||
effects of sodium are more basic than just helping to prevent activation of that system. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A slight decrease in temperature can promote inflammation (Matsui, et al., 2006). The thermogenic | |||
substances--dietary protein, sodium, sucrose, thyroid and progesterone--are antiinflammatory for many | |||
reasons, but very likely the increased temperature itself is important. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A poor reaction to stress, with increased cortisol, can raise the body temperature by accelerating the | |||
breakdown and resynthesis of proteins, but adaptive resistance to stress increases the temperature by | |||
increasing the consumption of oxygen and fuel. In the presence of increased cortisol, abdominal fat | |||
increases, along with circulating fatty acids and calcium, as mitochondrial respiration is suppressed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When mice are chilled, they spontaneously prefer slightly salty water, rather than fresh, and it increases | |||
their heat production (Dejima, et al., 1996). When rats are given 0.9 per cent sodium chloride solution with | |||
their regular food, their heat production increases, and their body fat, including abdominal fat, decreases | |||
(Bryant, et al., 1984). These responses to increased dietary sodium are immediate. Part of the effect of | |||
sodium involves regulatory processes in the brain, which are sensitive to the ratio between sodium and | |||
calcium. Decreasing sodium, or increasing calcium, causes the body"s metabolism to shift away from | |||
thermogenesis and accelerated respiration. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Regulating intracellular calcium by increasing the production of carbon dioxide is probably a basic | |||
mechanism in sodium"s protection against inflammation and excitatory cell damage and degeneration. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cortisol"s suppression of mitochondrial respiration is closely associated with its ability to increase | |||
intracellular calcium. Cortisol blocks the thermogenic effects of sodium, allowing intracellular calcium to | |||
damage cells. With aging, the tissues are more susceptible to these processes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The thermogenic effects of sodium can be seen in long-term studies, as well as short. A low-sodium diet | |||
accelerates the decrease in heat production that normally occurs with aging, lowering the metabolic rate of | |||
brown fat and body temperature, and increasing the fat content of the body, as well as the activity of the | |||
fat synthesizing enzyme (Xavier, et al., 2003). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Activation of heat production and increased body temperature might account for some of the GABA-like | |||
sedative effects of increased sodium. Increasing GABA in the brain increases brown fat heat production | |||
(Horton, et al., 1988). Activation of heat production by brown fat increases slow wave sleep (Dewasmes, et | |||
al., 2003), the loss of which is characteristic of aging. (In adult humans, the skeletal muscles have | |||
heat-producing functions similar to brown fat.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Now that inflammation is recognized as having a central role in the degenerative diseases, the fact that | |||
renin, angiotensin, and aldosterone all contribute to inflammation and are increased by a sodium deficiency, | |||
should arouse interest in exploring the therapeutic uses of sodium supplementation, and the integrated use | |||
of all of the factors that normally support respiratory energy production, especially thyroid and | |||
progesterone. Progesterone"s antagonism to aldosterone has been known for many years, and the synthetic | |||
antialdosterone drugs are simply poor imitations of progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But the drug industry is interested in selling new drugs to block the formation and action of each of the | |||
components of the RAAS, rather than an inexpensive method (such as nutrition) to normalize the system. | |||
</p> | |||
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J Appl Physiol. 1999 Sep;87(3):1016-25. <strong>Effects of oral contraceptives on body fluid regulation. | |||
</strong>Stachenfeld NS, Silva C, Keefe DL, Kokoszka CA, Nadel ER. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Appl Physiol. 1999 Sep;87(3):1016-25. <strong>Effects of oral contraceptives on body fluid regulation. | |||
</strong>Stachenfeld NS, Silva C, Keefe DL, Kokoszka CA, Nadel ER. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Exp. Gerontol. 2, 173-182 (1967). <strong>Relation of lifespan to brain weight, body weight and metabolic | |||
rate among inbred mouse strains. | |||
</strong> | |||
Storer, J. B. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Pathol 2002 Nov;161(5):1773-81. <strong>Aldosterone-induced inflammation in the rat heart: role of | |||
oxidative stress. | |||
</strong> | |||
Sun Y, Zhang J, Lu L, Chen SS, Quinn MT, Weber KT. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Circ Res. 1976 Jun;38(6 Suppl 2):73-83. <strong>Hemodynamic role of extracellular fluid in | |||
hypertension.</strong> Tarazi RC. "<strong>Plasma volume is usually lower in patients with essential | |||
hypertension than in normal subjects.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Gann. 1976 Apr;67(2):223-9.<strong> | |||
Protective effect of mucin on experimental gastric cancer induced by | |||
N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine plus sodium chloride in rats.</strong> Tatematsu M, Takahashi M, | |||
Hananouchi M, Shirai T, Hirose M. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Aging Cell. 2007 Jun;6(3):307-17. <strong>Expansion of the calcium hypothesis of brain aging and Alzheimer's | |||
disease: minding the store.</strong> Thibault O, Gant JC, Landfield PW. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Life Sci. 1990;47(25):2317-22.<strong> | |||
Pharmacological evidence for involvement of the sympathetic nervous system in the increase in renin | |||
secretion produced by a low sodium diet in rats. | |||
</strong> | |||
Tkacs NC, Kim M, Denzon M, Hargrave B, Ganong WF. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Trauma. 1992 Jun;32(6):704-12; discussion 712-3. <strong>Effects of hypertonic saline dextran | |||
resuscitation on oxygen delivery, oxygen consumption, and lipid peroxidation after burn injury.</strong> | |||
Tokyay R, Zeigler ST, Kramer GC, Rogers CS, Heggers JP, Traber DL, Herndon DN. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pflugers Arch. 1976 Jun 22;363(3):219-22. <strong>Is the chemomechanical energy transformation reversible? | |||
</strong>Ulbrich M, R"egg JC. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Experientia 1971 Jan 15;27(1):45-6. <strong>Stretch induced formation of ATP-32P in glycerinated fibres of | |||
insect flight muscle.</strong> Ulbrich M, Ruegg JC | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Front Biosci. 2007 Jan 1;12:2457-70.<strong> | |||
Maternal-fetal metabolism in normal pregnancy and preeclampsia. | |||
</strong>von Versen-Hoeynck FM, Powers RW. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Br J Nutr. 2005 May;93(5):575-9. <strong>The effects of drinks made from simple sugars on blood pressure in | |||
healthy older people.</strong> Visvanathan R, Chen R, Garcia M, Horowitz M, Chapman I. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Clin Cardiol. 1980 Oct;3(5):348-51. <strong>Sympathetic nervous system activity during sodium restriction in | |||
essential hypertension.</strong> Warren SE, Vieweg WV, O'Connor DT. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Curr Heart Fail Rep. 2004 Jul;1(2):51-6. <strong>Efficacy of aldosterone receptor antagonism in heart | |||
failure: potential mechanisms. | |||
</strong> | |||
Weber KT. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Hypertens. 1996 Dec;14(12):1461-2. <strong>Is salt-sensitivity of blood pressure a reproducible | |||
phenomenon-commentary.</strong> Weinberger MH. Hypertension Research Center, Indiana University School | |||
of Medicine, Indianapolis 46202, USA. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Clin Invest. 1983 Apr;71(4):916-25. <strong>Stimulation of thermogenesis by carbohydrate overfeeding. | |||
Evidence against sympathetic nervous system mediation.</strong> Welle S, Campbell RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Br Med J (Clin Res Ed). 1986 Jan 18;292(6514):168-70. <strong>Treatment of hyponatraemic seizures with | |||
intravenous 29.2% saline.</strong> Worthley LI, Thomas PD. "Five patients with severe hyponatraemia and | |||
epileptiform seizures were given 50 ml of 29.2% saline (250 mmol) through a central venous catheter over 10 | |||
minutes to <strong>control seizures rapidly, reduce cerebral oedema, and diminish the incidence of permanent | |||
neuronal damage.</strong> | |||
The saline controlled seizures in all patients, increasing the mean serum sodium concentration by 7.4 (SD | |||
1.14) mmol(mEq)/l and decreasing the mean serum potassium concentration by 0.62 (0.5) mmol(mEq)/l." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Metabolism. 2003 Aug;52(8):1072-7. <strong>Dietary sodium restriction exacerbates age-related changes in rat | |||
adipose tissue and liver lipogenesis.</strong> Xavier AR, Gar"falo MA, Migliorini RH, Kettelhut | |||
IC.<strong>"Taken together, the data indicate that prolonged dietary sodium restriction exacerbates normal, | |||
age-related changes in white and BAT metabolism."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Geriatr Nurs. 1997 Mar-Apr;18(2):87-8. <strong>Is salt restriction dangerous for elders?</strong> Yen PK. | |||
</p> | |||
Copyright 2007. Raymond Peat, P.O. Box 5764, Eugene OR 97405. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.comNot for | |||
republication without written permission. | |||
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<p> | |||
<strong>Serotonin, depression, and aggression</strong>: <strong>The problem of brain energy</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Extremely serious mistakes about the nature of the solar system didn't matter too much until interplanetary | |||
travel became a possibility. Extremely serious mistakes about brain "transmitters" and "receptors" didn't | |||
matter too much until the drug industry got involved. | |||
</p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
"Three years before Prozac received approval by the US Food and Drug Administration in late 1987, the German | |||
BGA, that country's FDA equivalent, had such serious reservations about Prozac's safety that it refused to | |||
approve the antidepressant based on Lilly's studies showing that previously nonsuicidal patients who took | |||
the drug had a fivefold higher rate of suicides and suicide attempts than those on older antidepressants, | |||
and a threefold higher rate than those taking placebos." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Using figures on Prozac both from Lilly and independent research, however, Dr. David Healy, an expert on | |||
the brain's serotonin system and director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine at the | |||
University of Wales, estimated that "probably 50,000 people have committed suicide on Prozac since its | |||
launch, over and above the number who would have done so if left untreated." | |||
</p> | |||
<p>The Boston Globe, 2000.</p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
Anyone who has been reading the mass media and watching television in recent decades is familiar with the | |||
use of tryptophan as an antidepressant. Tryptophan is easily converted to serotonin and melatonin in the | |||
body. The most popular kind of antidepressant, the "serotonin reuptake inhibitor", is said to act by | |||
increasing the action of serotonin in the brain. Many people have read articles in popular science magazines | |||
explaining that a deficiency of serotonin can cause depression, suicide, and aggression. Estrogen is often | |||
said to achieve its "wonderful" effects by increasing the effects of serotonin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Reserpine is an ancient tranquilizer, derived from a plant used in India for centuries. It has a powerful | |||
tranquilizing action, has been used to treat hypertension, and was found to be an antidepressant (Davies and | |||
Shepherd, 1955). It lowers the concentration of serotonin in the brain and other tissues. Isoniazid, an | |||
antidepressant that came into use in the 1950s, is effective, but it probably has no effect on serotonin. | |||
When those drugs were popular, serotonin wasn"t recognized as a "neurotransmitter." It wasn"t until the | |||
1960s that our present set of doctrines regarding serotonin"s effects on mood and behavior came into being. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin research is relatively new, but it rivals estrogen research for the level of incompetence and | |||
apparent fraudulent intent that can be found in professional publications. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This is partly because of the involvement of the drug industry, but the U.S. government also played a role | |||
in setting a pattern of confused and perverse interpretation of serotonin physiology, by its policy of | |||
denigrating and incriminating LSD, a powerful serotonin (approximate) antagonist, by any means possible, for | |||
example claiming that it causes genetic damage and provokes homicidal or suicidal violence. The issue of | |||
genetic damage was already disproved in the 1960s, but this was never publicly acknowledged by the National | |||
Institutes of Mental Health or other government agency. The government"s irresponsible actions helped to | |||
create the drug culture, in which health warnings about drugs were widely disregarded, because the | |||
government had been caught in blatant fraud. In more recent years, government warnings about tryptophan | |||
supplements have been widely dismissed, because the government has so often lied. Even when the public | |||
health agencies try to do something right, they fail, because they have done so much wrong. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In animal studies LSD, and other anti-serotonin agents, increase playfulness and accelerate learning, and | |||
cause behavioral impairment only at very high doses. While reserpine was used medically for several decades, | |||
and was eventually found to have harmful side effects, medical research in LSD was stopped before its actual | |||
side effects could be discovered. The misrepresentations about LSD, as a powerful antiserotonin agent, | |||
allowed a set of cultural stereotypes about serotonin to be established. Misconceptions about serotonin and | |||
melatonin and tryptophan, which are metabolically interrelated, have persisted, and it seems that the drug | |||
industry has exploited these mistakes to promote the "new generation" of psychoactive drugs as activators of | |||
serotonin responses. If LSD makes people go berserk, as the government claimed, then a product to amplify | |||
the effects of serotonin should make people sane. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The "serotonin reuptake inhibitors" are called the "third generation" of antidepressants. The monoamine | |||
oxidase (MAO) inhibitors, that came into use in the 1950s, are called the "first generation." When their | |||
patents expire on a "generation" of drugs, the drug companies find reasons for claiming that the new drugs | |||
are better. Every doctor in the country seems to know that the old MAO-inhibitors are dangerous because they | |||
can raise blood pressure if you eat certain kinds of cheese while taking them. <strong>In fact, statistics | |||
show that they are safer than the new generation of antidepressants.</strong> It is hardly possible for | |||
a physician to prescribe the most appropriate drug, because the medical licensing boards are thoroughly | |||
indoctrinated by the drug companies, to believe that the safest and most effective drugs are those whose | |||
patents are still in force. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While it is true that the newer antidepressants increase the actions of serotonin, it is not true that this | |||
explains their antidepressant action. This is a culturally conditioned promotional construction. Since | |||
different antidepressants increase, decrease, or don"t affect the actions of serotonin, a radically new kind | |||
of theory of depression and the antidepressants is needed. Theories based on "transmitter" substances and | |||
"receptors" are favored by the drug industry, but that kind of thinking is hardly better than the belief in | |||
demons and their exorcism. If an herbal tea cures depression because the demon doesn"t like its smell, at | |||
least the patient never has to abandon a remedy because a tea patent has expired. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the world of "neurotransmitters" and "receptors," there is ample room for the development of speculative | |||
mechanisms of drug action. Serotonin is regulated by the rate of its synthesis and degradation, by its | |||
uptake, storage, and release, and by its transporters, and its effects are modified by a great variety of | |||
receptors, by the number of these receptors, and by their binding affinities and competitive binders. | |||
"Different receptors" are defined by the effects of chemicals other than serotonin; this means that | |||
serotonin itself hypothetically gains some of the properties of every substance that shows some binding | |||
competition with serotonin. This complexity*note 1 has made it possible to argue that a given condition is | |||
caused by either an excess or a deficiency of serotonin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The drug companies like to call some of their new products SSRI, "selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors," | |||
meaning that they don"t indiscriminately increase all the biogenic amines, the way the old MAO inhibitors | |||
supposedly did. Every drug does many things, each a little differently, so it"s technically true to say that | |||
they "selectively" do this or that. But the term "antidepressant," as distinguished from "tranquilizer," | |||
says that the drug is intended to relieve depression. Injecting serotonin never does that, but sometimes | |||
adrenalin or dopamine does, and these "SSRI" drugs increase the activities of those other amines enough that | |||
those changes could explain the altered mood, if it weren"t for the need to speak of a "new generation of | |||
drugs." Injecting serotonin, or increasing its activity, can cause sedation, helplessness, or apathy, but | |||
these drugs have that effect only some of the time. Therefore, they aren"t called tranquilizers. If they | |||
were really selective for serotonin, they just wouldn"t be antidepressants. And chemicals that antagonize | |||
serotonin do seem to function as antidepressants (Martin, et al., 1992). When an SSRI is used to treat | |||
irritability and aggression, it is appropriate to call it a tranquilizer. When drugs are used empirically, | |||
without really understanding the disease or the drug, classifications, descriptions, and names are | |||
subjective. The serotonin situation reminds me of the history of DES: For almost twenty years, this | |||
synthetic estrogen was marketed for the prevention of abortions; then it came out as the "morning after" | |||
contraception/abortion pill. "If increasing serotonin isn"t the cure, then maybe decreasing serotonin will | |||
be the cure." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
To begin to understand serotonin, it"s necessary to step back from the culture of neurotransmitters, and to | |||
look at the larger biological picture. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin and estrogen have many systematically interrelated functions, and women are much more likely to | |||
suffer from depression than men are. Serotonin and histamine are increased by estrogen, and their activation | |||
mimics the effects of estrogen. Serotonin is closely involved in mood disorders, but also in a great variety | |||
of other problems that affect women much more frequently than men. These are probably primarily energy | |||
disorders, relating to cellular respiration and thyroid function. Liver disease and brain disease, e.g., | |||
Alzheimer"s disease, are both much more common in women than in men, and serotonin and estrogen strongly | |||
affect the energetic processes in these organs. Liver disease can increase the brain"s exposure to | |||
serotonin, ammonia, and histamine. It isn"t just a coincidence that these three amines occur together and | |||
are neurotoxic; they are all stress-related substances, with natural roles in signaling and regulation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are good reasons for thinking that serotonin contributes to the nerve damage seen in multiple | |||
sclerosis and Alzheimer"s disease. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The high incidence of multiple sclerosis in women, and its onset during their reproductive years, is well | |||
known. The number of brain lesions is associated with the ratio of estrogen to progesterone. Estrogen | |||
activates mast cells to release histamine and serotonin, and activated mast cells can produce brain edema | |||
and demyelination. Blood clots have been microscopically associated with brain lesions like those in | |||
multiple sclerosis, and the platelets in clots release neurotoxic serotonin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In Parkinson"s disease, the benefits seen from increasing the concentration of dopamine could result from | |||
dopamine"s antagonism to serotonin; anti-serotonin drugs can alleviate the symptoms, and 5-hydroxytryptophan | |||
can worsen the symptoms (Chase, et al., 1976). Other movement disorders, including akathisia and chorea, can | |||
be produced by serotonin. In autism, repetitive motions are a common symptom, and serotonin is high in the | |||
blood serum and platelets of autistic children and their relatives. Irritable bowel syndrome, another kind | |||
of "movement disorder," can be treated effectively with anti-serotonin agents. This syndrome is very common | |||
in women, with premenstrual exacerbations, when estrogen is highest. One of the side effects of oral | |||
contraceptives is chorea, uncontrollable dancing movements. Some research has found increased serotonin in | |||
people with Huntington"s chorea (Kish, et al., 1987), and positive results with bromocriptine have been | |||
reported (Agnoli, et al., 1977). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The neurosteroid, allopregnanolone, for which progesterone is the precursor, facilitates the inhibitory | |||
action of GABA, which is known to be deficient in some disorders of mood and movement. This suggests that | |||
progesterone will be therapeutic in the movement disorders, as it is in various mood problems. Progesterone | |||
has some specific antiserotonin actions (e.g., Wu, et al., 2000). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The "serotonin reuptake inhibitors" "are presumed" to have the same effect on the brain that they have on | |||
blood platelets. They inhibit the ability of platelets to retain and concentrate serotonin, allowing it to | |||
stay in the plasma. This uptake-inhibited condition is a model of the platelet behavior seen in multiple | |||
sclerosis and Alzheimer"s disease. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin and its derivative, melatonin, are both involved in the biology of torpor and hibernation. | |||
Serotonin inhibits mitochondrial respiration. Excitoxic death of nerve cells involves both the limitation of | |||
energy production, and increased cellular activation. Serotonin has both of these actions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In hibernating animals, the stress of a declining food supply causes increased serotonin production. In | |||
humans and animals that don"t hibernate, the stress of winter causes very similar changes. Serotonin lowers | |||
temperature by decreasing the metabolic rate. Tryptophan and melatonin are also hypothermic. In the winter, | |||
more thyroid is needed to maintain a normal rate of metabolism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Increased serotonin interferes with the consolidation of learning. Hypothermia has a similar effect. Since | |||
estrogen increases serotonergia, and decreases body temperature, these effects help to explain the | |||
long-observed interference of estrogen with learning. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although ammonia, produced by fatigue or liver inefficiency, creates torpor, it can also cause convulsions. | |||
It synergizes with serotonin, and both of these promote excitotoxicity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin"s other names include thrombotonin, thrombocytin, enteramine, and 5-HT, its chemical name | |||
(5-hydroxytryptamine). These historical names derive from its role in the intestine and in blood vessels. In | |||
1951, it was discovered that enteramine and thrombotonin were a single substance, and its involvement in | |||
circulatory disease, especially hypertension and vascular spasms, was the focus of research. (The increase | |||
in the number of "cardiovascular events" recently seen in the study of women using estrogen is what might be | |||
expected from something which increases serotonin dominance.) It causes vasoconstriction and vasospasm, and | |||
promotes clotting, when it"s released from platelets. Especially when it is released from mast cells, it is | |||
considered to be an inflammatory mediator, along with histamine. Edema, bronchoconstriction, | |||
immunosuppression, and joint swelling are produced by the release of serotonin from platelets or other | |||
cells. As inflammatory mediators, serotonin and histamine are directly involved in asthma, hives, | |||
gastrointestinal damage from alcohol, nerve cell damage, edema, and shock. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The broadly protective effects of antihistamine drugs have been energetically exploited by the drug industry | |||
for fifty years. Why haven"t antiserotonin drugs been similarly emphasized? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Research on LSD and its derivatives led to drugs such as bromocriptine, which oppose the effects of | |||
histamine and estrogen. Some of bromocriptine"s effects are clearly antagonistic to serotonin, though | |||
bromocriptine is usually called a "dopamine agonist"; dopamine is pretty generally a serotonin antagonist. | |||
Methysergide, a related drug with antiserotonin activity, is effective in protecting the brain from the | |||
effects of strokes. But there is a general disinclination to understand the broad biological meaning of | |||
these effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
I think the corrupt campaign against LSD played a large role in this: If the therapeutic value of LSD and | |||
related drugs (e.g., methysergide) with expired patents,*note2 used as antiserotonin agents, became widely | |||
known, the existing system of power and profit would be threatened. The war on drugs has always had its | |||
ulterior motives,including justifying domestic and foreign interventions in issues that have nothing to do | |||
with drugs. And in the case of the serotonin/antiserotonin mythology, this "war" has been rewarding to the | |||
drug industry--Lilly makes over $2 billion annually on Prozac. Each suicide caused by Prozac would appear to | |||
be balanced by several hundred thousand dollars earned by the corporation. If the war on drugs were serious, | |||
this would be a good place to start. And in weighing what corporate punishments might be appropriate, this | |||
corporation"s financial support for universal capital punishment should be taken into account. Many | |||
experiments have shown that estrogen is very important for aggressive behavior in animals, and estrogen | |||
promotes serotonin"s actions. Some research shows that increased serotonin is associated with certain types | |||
of increased aggressiveness, and antiserotonin agents decrease aggresiveness (Ieni, et al., 1985; McMillen, | |||
et al., 1987) but the clearest research has to do with the crucial role of serotonin in learned | |||
helplessness. Learned helplessness is a biological condition that is created by inescapable stress. In this | |||
state, animals that would normally swim for hours will stop swimming after a few minutes and allow | |||
themselves to drown. They simply don"t have enough mental or physical energy to overcome challenges. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In learned helplessness, the level of serotonin is high, and an excess of serotonin helps to create the | |||
state of learned helplessness. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin activates glycolysis, forming lactic acid. Excess lactic acid tends to decrease efficient energy | |||
production by interfering with mitochondrial respiration. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Heart failure, hypertension, muscle hyperalgesia (Babenko, et al., 2000), some panic reactions, and other | |||
maladaptive biological events associated with problems of energy metabolism, are promoted by excessive | |||
serotonin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Autistic children and their relatives have high concentrations of serotonin in their serum and platelets. | |||
Members of a family tend to eat the same foods and to share other environmental conditions. Prenatal | |||
hypothyroidism and various kinds of imprinting, including hyperestrogenism, could account for this. Some | |||
studies have reported that thyroid supplements help autistic children, and anti-serotonin drugs have caused | |||
improvement in both children and adults. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin tends to cause hypoglycemia, and hypoglycemia inhibits the conversion of thyroxine into the active | |||
T3 hormone. Hypoglycemia and hypothyroidism increase noradrenaline, and autistic people have been found to | |||
have more noradrenaline than normal. These changes, along with the general hypometabolism caused by excess | |||
serotonin, seem to justify the use of a thyroid supplement in autism and other serotonin-excess syndromes. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Overdose with the serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or with 5-hydroxytryptophan, which has effects similar to | |||
serotonin, can cause the sometimes fatal "serotonin syndrome." Symptoms can include tremors, altered | |||
consciousness, poor coordination, cardiovascular disturbances, and seizures. Treatment with anti-serotonin | |||
drugs can alleviate the symptoms and usually can prevent death. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The serotonin syndrome has been reported in users of St. John"s wort as an antidepressant. Since the other | |||
large neutral amino acids compete with tryptophan for entry into cells, the branched chain amino acids have | |||
some anti-serotonin activity, and this could be a justification for their use by athletes, since tryptophan | |||
and serotonin decrease glycogen stores and reduce endurance. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The only amino acid that has ever been found to be carcinogenic is tryptophan. Its ability to mimic estrogen | |||
in promoting the release of prolactin is probably responsible. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A large carbohydrate meal increases the ratio of tryptophan to the competing amino acids, and it has been | |||
proposed that this can shift the body"s balance toward increased serotonin. In an animal study, | |||
bromocriptine, which shifts the balance away from serotonin, reduced obesity and insulin and free fatty | |||
acids, and improved glucose tolerance. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
All of these observations are easiest to understand in terms of the suppression of cellular energy. | |||
Serotonin, like estrogen, lowers cellular ATP and interferes with oxidative metabolism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin, like histamine, has its proper physiological functions, but it is a mediator of stress that has | |||
to be systematically balanced by the systems that support high energy respiratory metabolism. The use of | |||
supplements of tryptophan, hydroxytryptophan, or of the serotonin promoting antidepressant drugs, seems to | |||
be biologically inappropriate. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many of the symptoms produced by excess serotonin are also the symptoms of hypothyroidism. Thyroid, | |||
progesterone, and high quality protein nutrition are central to protection against the serotonin syndromes. | |||
(Progesterone, like LSD, can inhibit the firing of serotonergic nerves, but an overdose, unlike LSD, never | |||
produces hallucinations.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the many actions of the "SSRI" (such as fluoxetine, Prozac), which aren"t related to their effect on | |||
serotonin, is to increase the concentration of allopregnanolone in the brain, imitating the action of | |||
increased progesterone. Following this discovery, Lilly got Prozac approved as a treatment for premenstrual | |||
syndrome. Since the production of allopregnanolone and progesterone depends on the availability of | |||
pregnenolone and cholesterol, a low cholesterol level would be one of the factors making this an | |||
inappropriate way to treat PMS. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If we think biologically, starting with the role of serotonin as a damage-induced inflammatory mediator, we | |||
can speculate that an infinite number of irritating substances will be "serotonin reuptake inhibitors." The | |||
particular history of the "third generation antidepressants" is one that should disturb our tranquility. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong>SOME NOTES AND SOURCES</strong></p>*Note 1: I don"t want to imply that the receptor theory is wrong | |||
just because it allows for the introduction of innumerable experimental artifacts; it is primarily wrong because | |||
it is tied to the profoundly irrelevant "membrane theory" of cell regulation.*Note 2: Preparation for Lysergic | |||
Acid Amides: United States Patent Office 2,736,728 Patented February 28, 1956 Richard P. Pioch, Indianapolis, | |||
Indiana, assignor, to Eli Lilly and Co., Indianapolis, Indiana, a corporation of Indiana. No drawing. | |||
Application December 6, 1954, Serial No. 473,443. 10 claims. (Cl. 260-285.5)From the PDR on Prozac<strong | |||
>:</strong> "Pharmacodynamics: The antidepressant and antiobsessive-compulsive action of fluoxetine is <strong | |||
>presumed</strong> to be linked to its inhibition of CNS neuronal uptake of serotonin. Studies at clinically | |||
relevant doses in man have demonstrated that fluoxetine blocks the uptake of serotonin<strong> | |||
into human platelets</strong>. Studies in animals also suggest that fluoxetine is a much more potent uptake | |||
inhibitor of serotonin than of norepinephrine."The Lancet 269 (1955): 117"20. <strong>"Reserpine in the | |||
Treatment of Anxious and Depressed Patients,"</strong> Davies DL and Shepherd M.Gen Pharmacol 1994 | |||
Oct;25(6):1257-1262.<strong> | |||
Serotonin-induced decrease in brain ATP, stimulation of brain anaerobic glycolysis and elevation of plasma | |||
hemoglobin; the protective action of calmodulin antagonists.</strong> Koren-Schwartzer N, Chen-Zion M, | |||
Ben-Porat H, Beitner R Department of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. <strong>1. Injection | |||
of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) to rats, induced a dramatic fall in brain ATP level, accompanied by an | |||
increase in P(i). Concomitant to these changes, the activity of cytosolic phosphofructokinase, the | |||
rate-limiting enzyme of glycolysis, was significantly enhanced. Stimulation of anaerobic glycolysis was also | |||
reflected by a marked increase in lactate content in brain. 2. Brain glucose</strong> 1,6-bisphosphate level | |||
was decreased, whereas fructose 2,6-bisphosphate was unaffected by serotonin. 3. All these serotonin-induced | |||
changes in brain, which are characteristic for cerebral ischemia, were prevented by treatment with the | |||
calmodulin (CaM) antagonists, trifluoperazine or thioridazine. 4. Injection of serotonin also induced a marked | |||
elevation of plasma hemoglobin, reflecting lysed erythrocytes, which was also prevented by treatment with the | |||
CaM antagonists. 5. The present results suggest that CaM antagonists may be effective drugs in treatment of many | |||
pathological conditions and diseases in which plasma serotonin levels are known to increase.J Neural Transm | |||
1998;105(8-9):975-86. <strong>Role of tryptophan in the elevated serotonin-turnover in hepatic | |||
encephalopathy.</strong> Herneth AM, Steindl P, Ferenci P, Roth E, Hortnagl H Department of Internal | |||
Medicine IV, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Vienna, Austria. The increase of the brain levels of | |||
5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) in hepatic encephalopathy (HE) suggests an increased turnover of serotonin | |||
(5-HT). To study the role of tryptophan on the increased brain 5-HT metabolism in HE, we attempted to monitor | |||
brain levels of tryptophan in rats with thioacetamide-induced acute liver failure by intravenous infusion of | |||
branched-chain amino acids (BCAA). The effect of this treatment on 5-HT synthesis and metabolism was | |||
investigated in five brain areas. BCAA-infusions (1 and 2 gm/kg/24 h) increased the ratio BCAA/aromatic amino | |||
acids in plasma two- and fourfold, respectively, and lowered both plasma and brain levels of tryptophan. At the | |||
higher BCAA-dose all parameters suggesting an altered brain 5-HT metabolism (increased brain levels of 5-HT and | |||
5-HIAA, increased 5-HIAA/5-HT ratio) were almost completely normalized. These results provide further evidence | |||
for the role of tryptophan in the elevation of brain 5-HT metabolism and for a potential role of BCAA in the | |||
treatment of HE.Tugai VA; Kurs'kii MD; Fedoriv OM. <strong>[Effect of serotonin on Ca2+ transport in | |||
mitochondria conjugated with the respiratory chain].</strong> Ukrainskii Biokhimicheskii Zhurnal, 1973 | |||
Jul-Aug, 45(4):408-12.Kurskii MD; Tugai VA; Fedoriv AN.<strong> | |||
[Effect of serotonin and calcium on separate components of respiratory chain of mitochondria in some rabbit | |||
tissues].</strong> Ukrainskii Biokhimicheskii Zhurnal, 1970, 42(5):584-8.Watanabe Y; Shibata S; Kobayashi B. | |||
<strong>Serotonin-induced swelling of rat liver mitochondria.</strong> Endocrinologia Japonica, 1969 Feb, | |||
16(1):133-47.Mahler DJ; Humoller FL. <strong>The influence of serotonin on oxidative metabolism of brain | |||
mitochondria.</strong> Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1968 Apr, | |||
127(4):1074-9.Eur J Pharmacol 1994 Aug 11;261(1-2):25-32. <strong>The effect of alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonists | |||
in isolated globally ischemic rat hearts.</strong> Sargent CA, Dzwonczyk S, Grover G.J. "The alpha | |||
2-adrenoceptor antagonist, yohimbine, has been reported to protect hypoxic myocardium. Yohimbine has several | |||
other activities, including 5-HT receptor antagonism, at the concentrations at which protection was found." | |||
"Pretreatment with yohimbine (1-10 microM) caused a concentration-dependent increase in reperfusion left | |||
ventricular developed pressure and a reduction in end diastolic pressure and lactate dehydrogenase release. The | |||
structurally similar compound rauwolscine (10 microM) also protected the ischemic myocardium. In contrast, | |||
idozoxan (0.3-10 microM) or tolazoline (10 microM) had no protective effects. The<strong> | |||
cardioprotective effects of yohimbine were partially reversed by 30 microM 5-HT. These results indicate that | |||
the mechanism for the cardioprotective activity of yohimbine may involve 5-HT receptor antagonistic | |||
activity." | |||
</strong>Zubovskaia AM. <strong>[Effect of serotonin on some pathways of oxidative metabolism in the | |||
mitochondria of rabbit heart muscle].</strong> Voprosy Meditsinskoi Khimii, 1968 Mar-Apr, | |||
14(2):152-7.Warashina Y. <strong>[On the effect of serotonin on phosphorylation of rat liver | |||
mitochondria</strong>]. Hoppe-Seylers Zeitschrift fur Physiologische Chemie, 1967 Feb, 348(2):139-48.Eur | |||
Neuropsychopharmacol 1997 Oct;7 Suppl 3:S323-S328. <strong>Prevention of stress-induced morphological and | |||
cognitive consequences</strong>. McEwen BS, Conrad CD, Kuroda Y, Frankfurt M, Magarinos AM, McKittrick C, | |||
Laboratory of Neuroendocrinology, Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021, USA. Atrophy and dysfunction of | |||
the human hippocampus is a feature of aging in some individuals, and this dysfunction predicts later dementia. | |||
There is reason to believe that adrenal glucocorticoids may contribute to these changes, since the elevations of | |||
glucocorticoids in Cushing's syndrome and during normal aging are associated with atrophy of the entire | |||
hippocampal formation in humans and are linked to deficits in short-term verbal memory. We have developed a | |||
model of stress-induced atrophy of the hippocampus of rats at the cellular level, and we have been investigating | |||
underlying mechanisms in search of agents that will block the atrophy. Repeated restraint stress in rats for 3 | |||
weeks causes changes in the hippocampal formation that include suppression of 5-HT1A receptor binding and | |||
atrophy of dendrites of CA3 pyramidal neurons, as well as impairment of initial learning of a radial arm maze | |||
task. <strong>Because serotonin is released by stressors and may play a role in the actions of stress on nerve | |||
cells, we investigated the actions of agents that facilitate or inhibit serotonin reuptake.</strong> | |||
Tianeptine is known to enhance serotonin uptake, and we compared it with fluoxetine, an inhibitor of 5-HT | |||
reuptake, as well as with desipramine. Tianeptine treatment (10 mg/kg/day) prevented the stress-induced atrophy | |||
of dendrites of CA3 pycamidal neurons, whereas neither fluoxetine (10 mg/kg/day) nor desipramine (10 mg/kg/day) | |||
had any effect. Tianeptine treatment also prevented the stress-induced impairment of radial maze learning. | |||
Because <strong>corticosterone- and stress-induced atrophy of CA3 dendrites is also blocked by phenytoin, an | |||
inhibitor of excitatory amino acid release and actions, these results suggest that serotonin released by | |||
stress or corticosterone may interact pre- or post-synaptically with glutamate released by stress or | |||
corticosterone, and that the final common path may involve interactive effects between serotonin and | |||
glutamate receptors on the dendrites of CA3 neurons innervated by mossy fibers from the dentate gyrus. We | |||
discuss the implications of these findings for treating cognitive impairments and the risk for dementia in | |||
the elderly.</strong>J Mol Cell Cardiol 1985 Nov;17(11):1055-63. <strong>Digitoxin therapy partially | |||
restores cardiac catecholamine and brain serotonin metabolism in congestive heart failure.</strong> Sole MJ, | |||
Benedict CR, Versteeg DH, de Kloet ER. The effect of therapeutic doses of digitalis in modifying neural activity | |||
has been the subject of considerable controversy. In earlier studies we reported <strong>an increase both in | |||
serotonergic activity in the posterior hypothalamus and pons-medulla and in cardiac sympathetic tone in the | |||
failing cardiomyopathic hamster.</strong> In this study we examine the effects of doses of digitoxin, known | |||
to be therapeutic for hamster heart failure, on monoamine neurotransmitter metabolism in the brain and heart | |||
during the cardiomyopathy. Both digitoxin and ASI-222, a polar amino-glycoside which does not cross the<strong> | |||
</strong>blood-brain barrier, given either acutely (6 mg/kg ip) or chronically (2 mg/kg/day ip for 10 days), | |||
normalized the failure-induced increase in serotonin turnover in the pons-medulla but had no effect on the | |||
changes in the posterior hypothalamus. Digitoxin therapy also reduced cardiac and adrenal sympathetic activity | |||
partially restoring cardiac catecholamine stores. In order to more clearly define the pathways involved we | |||
measured serotonin (microgram/g protein) in 18 brain nuclei after 10 days of digitoxin or vehicle treatment. | |||
<strong>Heart failure was associated with an increase in serotonin in five nuclei: the mammillary bodies, | |||
ventromedial, periventricular and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus, and the centralis superior | |||
nucleus of the raphe</strong>. Digitoxin therapy completely normalized the changes in the centralis superior | |||
and ventromedialis nuclei; neither congestive heart failure nor digitoxin affected serotonin levels in other | |||
nuclei. We conclude that there is an increase in activity in specific brain serotonergic nuclei in congestive | |||
heart failure. Digitalis reduces cardiac sympathetic tone and restores the changes in two of these nuclei: the | |||
ventromedial and the centralis superior.+2Brain Res 2000 Jan 24;853(2):275-81. <strong>Duration and distribution | |||
of experimental muscle hyperalgesia in humans following combined infusions of serotonin and | |||
bradykinin.</strong> Babenko V, Svensson P, Graven-Nielsen T, Drewes AM, Jensen TS, Arendt-Nielsen L.Eur J | |||
Pharmacol 1992 Feb 25;212(1):73-8. <strong>5-HT3 receptor antagonists reverse helpless behaviour in | |||
rats.</strong> Martin P, Gozlan H, Puech AJ Departement de Pharmacologie, Faculte de Medecine | |||
Pitie-Salpetriere, Paris, France. The effects of the 5-HT3 receptor antagonists, zacopride, ondansetron and ICS | |||
205-930, were investigated in an animal model of depression, the learned helplessness test. Rats previously | |||
subjected to a session of 60 inescapable foot-shocks exhibited a deficit of escape performance in three | |||
subsequent shuttle-box sessions. The 5-HT3 receptor antagonists administered i.p. twice daily on a chronic | |||
schedule (zacopride 0.03-2 mg/kg per day; ondansetron and ICS 205-930: 0.125-2 mg/kg per day) reduced the number | |||
of escape failures at low to moderate daily doses. This effect was not observed with the highest dose(s) of | |||
zacopride, ondansetron and ICS 205-930 tested. These results indicate that 5-HT3 antagonists may have effects | |||
like those of conventional antidepressants in rats.Neuropharmacology 1992 Apr;31(4):323-30. <strong>Presynaptic | |||
serotonin mechanisms in rats subjected to inescapable shock.</strong> Edwards E, Kornrich W, Houtten PV, | |||
Henn FA. "After exposure to uncontrollable shock training, two distinct groups of rats can be defined in terms | |||
of their performance in learning to escape from a controllable stress. Learned helpless rats do not learn to | |||
terminate the controllable stress, whereas non-learned helpless rats learn this response as readily as naive | |||
control rats do." "These results implicate presynaptic serotonin mechanisms in the behavioral deficit caused by | |||
uncontrollable shock. In addition, a limbic-hypothalamic pathway may serve as a control center for the | |||
behavioral response to stress."Neurochem Int 1992 Jul;21(1):29-35.<strong> | |||
In vitro neurotransmitter release in an animal model of depression</strong>. Edwards E, Kornrich W, van | |||
Houtten P, Henn FA. "Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to uncontrollable shock can be separated by a subsequent shock | |||
escape test into two groups: a "helpless" (LH) group which demonstrates a deficit in escape behavior, and a | |||
"nonlearned helpless" (NLH) group which shows no escape deficit and acquires the escape response as readily as | |||
naive control rats (NC) do." "The major finding concerned a significant increase in endogenous and | |||
K(+)-stimulated serotonin (5-HT) release in the hippocampal slices of LH rats. There were no apparent | |||
differences in acetylcholine, dopamine and noradrenaline release in the hippocampus of LH rats as compared to | |||
NLH and NC rats. These results add further support to previous studies in our laboratory which implicate | |||
presynaptic 5-HT mechanisms in the behavioral deficit caused by uncontrollable shock."Psychiatry Res 1994 | |||
Jun;52(3):285-93. <strong>In vivo serotonin release and learned helplessness.</strong> Petty F, Kramer G, Wilson | |||
L, Jordan S Mental Health Clinic, Dallas Veterans Affairs Medical Center, TX. Learned helplessness, a behavioral | |||
depression caused by exposure to inescapable stress, is considered to be an animal model of human depressive | |||
disorder. Like human depression, learned helplessness has been associated with a defect in serotonergic | |||
function, but the nature of this relationship is not entirely clear. We have used in vivo microdialysis brain | |||
perfusion to measure serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5HT) in extracellular space of medial frontal cortex in | |||
conscious, freely moving rats. Basal 5HT levels in rats perfused before exposure to tail-shock stress did not | |||
themselves correlate with subsequent learned helplessness behavior. However, 5HT release after stress showed a | |||
significant increase with helpless behavior. <strong>These data support the hypothesis that a cortical | |||
serotonergic excess is causally related to the development of learned helplessness.</strong>Pharmacol | |||
Biochem Behav 1994 Jul;48(3):671-6. <strong>Does learned helplessness induction by haloperidol involve serotonin | |||
mediation?</strong> Petty F, Kramer G, Moeller M Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Dallas 75216. Learned | |||
helplessness (LH) is a behavioral depression following inescapable stress. Helpless behavior was induced in | |||
naive rats by the dopamine D2 receptor blocker haloperidol (HDL) in a dose-dependent manner, with the greatest | |||
effects seen at 20 mg/kg (IP). Rats were tested 24 h after injection. Haloperidol (IP) increased release of | |||
serotonin (5-HT) in medial prefrontal cortex (MPC) as measured by in vivo microdialysis. Perfusion of HDL | |||
through the probe in MPC caused increased cortical 5-HT release, as did perfusion of both dopamine and the | |||
dopamine agonist apomorphine. Our previous work found that increased 5-HT release in MPC correlates with the | |||
development of LH. The present work suggests that increased DA release in MPC, known to occur with both | |||
inescapable stress and with HDL, may play a necessary but not sufficient role in the development of LH. Also, | |||
this suggests that increased DA activity in MPC leads to increased 5-HT release in MPC and to subsequent | |||
behavioral depression.Stroke 1991 Nov;22(11):1448-51. <strong>Platelet secretory products may contribute to | |||
neuronal injury.</strong> Joseph R, Tsering C, Grunfeld S, Welch KM Department of Neurology, Henry Ford | |||
Hospital and Health Sciences Center, Detroit, MI 48202. BACKGROUND: We do not fully understand the mechanisms | |||
for neuronal damage following cerebral arterial occlusion by a thrombus that consists mainly of platelets. The | |||
view that certain endogenous substances, such as glutamate, may also contribute to neuronal injury is now | |||
reasonably well established. Blood platelets are known to contain and secrete a number of substances that have | |||
been associated with neuronal dysfunction. Therefore, we hypothesize that a high concentration (approximately | |||
several thousand-fold higher than in plasma, in our estimation) of locally released platelet secretory products | |||
derived from the causative thrombus may contribute to neuronal injury and promote reactive gliosis. SUMMARY OF | |||
COMMENT: We have recently been able to report some direct support for this concept. When organotypic spinal cord | |||
cultures were exposed to platelet and platelet products, a significant reduction in the number and the size of | |||
the surviving neurons occurred in comparison with those in controls. We further observed that serotonin, a major | |||
platelet product, has neurotoxic properties. There may be other platelet components with similar effect.<strong> | |||
CONCLUSIONS: The hypothesis of platelet-mediated neurotoxicity gains some support from these recent in vitro | |||
findings. The concept could provide a new area of research in stroke, both at the clinical and basic | |||
levels.</strong>J. Clin Psychopharmacol 1991 Aug; 11(4):277-9.<strong> | |||
Disseminated intravascular coagulation and acute myoglobinuric renal failure: a consequence of the | |||
serotonergic syndrome.</strong> Miller F, Friedman R, Tanenbaum J, Griffin A. LetterChronobiol Int 2000 | |||
Mar;17(2):155-72. <strong>Association of the antidiabetic effects of bromocriptine with a shift in the daily | |||
rhythm of monoamine metabolism within the suprachiasmatic nuclei of the Syrian hamster.</strong> Luo S, Luo | |||
J, Cincotta AH.<strong> | |||
"Bromocriptine, a dopamine D2 agonist, inhibits seasonal fattening and improves seasonal insulin resistance | |||
in Syrian hamsters." | |||
</strong>"Compared with control values, bromocriptine treatment significantly reduced weight gain (14.9 vs. -2.9 | |||
g, p < .01) and the areas under the GTT glucose and insulin curves by 29% and 48%, respectively (p < .05). | |||
Basal plasma insulin concentration was markedly reduced throughout the day in bromocriptine-treated animals | |||
without influencing plasma glucose levels. Bromocriptine reduced the daily peak in FFA by 26% during the late | |||
light span (p < .05)." "Thus, bromocriptine-induced resetting of daily patterns of SCN neurotransmitter | |||
metabolism is associated with the effects of bromocriptine on attenuation of the obese insulin-resistant and | |||
glucose-intolerant condition. A large body of corroborating evidence suggests that such bromocriptine-induced | |||
changes in SCN monoamine metabolism may be functional in its effects on metabolism."Eur J Pharmacol 1982 Jul | |||
30;81(4):569-76.<strong> Actions of serotonin antagonists on dog coronary artery.</strong> Brazenor RM, Angus | |||
JA. Serotonin released from platelets may initiate coronary vasospasm in patients with variant angina. If this | |||
hypothesis is correct, serotonin antagonists without constrictor activity may be useful in this form of angina. | |||
We have investigated drugs classified as serotonin antagonists on dog circumflex coronary artery ring segments | |||
in vitro. Ergotamine, dihydroergotamine,<strong> | |||
bromocriptine, lisuride, ergometrine, ketanserin, trazodone, cyproheptadine and pizotifen caused | |||
non-competitive antagonism of serotonin concentration-response curves</strong>. In addition, ketanserin, | |||
trazodone, bromocriptine and pizotifen inhibited noradrenaline responses in concentrations similar to those | |||
required for serotonin antagonism. All drugs with the exception of ketanserin, cyproheptadine and pizotifen | |||
showed some degree of intrinsic constrictor activity. Methysergide antagonized responses to serotonin | |||
competitively but also constricted the coronary artery. The lack of a silent competitive serotonin antagonist | |||
precludes a definite characterization of coronary serotonin receptors at this time. However, the profile of | |||
activity observed for the antagonist drugs in the coronary artery differs from that seen in other vascular | |||
tissues. Of the drugs tested, ketanserin may be the most useful in variant angina since it is a potent 5HT | |||
antagonist, lacks agonist activity and has alpha-adrenoceptor blocking activity.Eur J Pharmacol 1985 May | |||
8;111(2):211-20. <strong>Maternal aggression in mice: effects of treatments with PCPA, 5-HTP and 5-HT receptor | |||
antagonists.</strong> Ieni JR, Thurmond JB. Drug treatments which influence brain serotonergic systems were | |||
administered to lactating female mice during the early postpartum period, and their effects on aggressive | |||
behavior, locomotor activity and brain monoamines were examined. P-chlorophenylalanine (200 and 400 mg/kg) and | |||
5-hydroxytryptophan (100 mg/kg) inhibited fighting behavior of postpartum mice toward unfamiliar male intruder | |||
mice. These drug-treated postpartum females showed increased latencies to attack male intruders and also reduced | |||
frequencies of attack. In addition, <strong>postpartum mice treated with the serotonin receptor antagonists, | |||
mianserin (2 and 4 mg/kg), methysergide (4 mg/kg) and methiothepin (0.25 and 0.5 mg/kg), displayed | |||
significantly less aggressive behavior than control mice, as measured by reduced number of attacks.</strong> | |||
Whole brain monoamine and monoamine metabolite levels were measured after drug treatments. The behavioral | |||
results are discussed in terms of drug-induced changes in brain chemistry and indicate a<strong> | |||
possible role for serotonin in the mediation of maternal aggressive behavior of mice. | |||
</strong> Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol 1987 Apr;335(4):454-64.<strong> | |||
Effects of gepirone, an aryl-piperazine anxiolytic drug, on aggressive behavior and brain monoaminergic | |||
neurotransmission. McMillen BA, Scott SM, Williams HL, Sanghera MK. | |||
</strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<strong>In support of this conclusion was the observed potentiation of antiaggressive effects by blocking 5HT | |||
receptors</strong> wit small doses of methiothepin or methysergide, which would exacerbate the decreased | |||
release of 5HT caused by gepirone. These results are in harmony with reports that decreased serotonergic | |||
activity has anxiolytic-like effects in animal models of anxiety.Farmakol Toksikol 1975 Mar-Apr;38(2):148-51. | |||
<strong>[Participation of the serotonin-reactive brain structure in certain forms of behavior in golden | |||
hamsters]. | |||
</strong>Popova NK, Bertogaeva VD.<strong> | |||
A viviacious play of young hamsters is shown to be accompanied by a drop of the serotonin level in the brain | |||
stem and the subsequent slumber - by its rise</strong>, while the corticosteroids content of the peripheral | |||
blood with the playful behavior experiences no changes. <strong>Iprazid and 5-oxytryptophan inhibit the playful | |||
activity,</strong> while dioxyphenylalanina (DOPA) does not influence it. A similar depression of the | |||
serotonin level in the brain stem was also noted in an aggressive behavior and stress conditions arising when | |||
adult male-hamsters are grouped together. A conclusion is drawn to the effect that changes in the content of | |||
serotonin in the brain stem are <strong>not associated with the emotional colouration of the condition, but | |||
rather reflect the transition from the somnolence to a highly active behavior.</strong>Biol Psychiatry 1985 | |||
Sep;20(9):1023-5 <strong>Triiodothyronine-induced reversal of learned helplessness in rats.</strong> Martin P, | |||
Brochet D, Soubrie P, Simon P.<p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2012. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<p><strong>Serotonin: Effects in disease, aging and inflammation</strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Interpreting medical publications requires some skills that aren't needed for understanding more strictly | |||
scientific reports, because medical writing often takes into account the fact that physicians spend most of | |||
their time interacting with the public, rather than studying. The public's understanding of medicine is | |||
shaped by "public relations," by the introduction of words and concepts that frame the argument. (The | |||
linguist George Lakoff summarized the essence of public relations by observing that people reject facts that | |||
are outside their view of reality, their mental framework.) Television and public schools now frame the | |||
worldview of the affluent cultures, according to the needs of the ruling powers. Long before specific | |||
prescription drugs could be advertised directly to consumers, the medical and pharmaceutical industries were | |||
creating a favorable frame for their products.Many years ago, public relations experts used expensive | |||
opinion polls to judge the effectiveness of their efforts, but now there is a convenient way to see how the | |||
general public is thinking: Wikipedia, the internet encyclopedia. The success of corporate advertising can | |||
be seen in their recent article on serotonin, which says "It is a well-known contributor to feelings of | |||
well-being; therefore it is also known as a 'happiness hormone' despite not being a hormone."The culture | |||
that has happy and unhappy hormones was a culture in which each hormone had a receptor, a substance in a | |||
cell which, when its ligand was bound to it, made the cell do something. Although that culture still has | |||
influence in the 21st century, discoveries made between 1940 and 1970 showed that those mechanical ideas of | |||
receptors didn't reflect biological reality. Albert Szent-Gyorgi and the Pullmans showed that the electronic | |||
qualities of molecules determined their functions, and Szent-Gyorgyi showed that the state of the cell, | |||
tissue, and organism governed the effect of hormones and drugs. In the 1960s, substances with very different | |||
biological effects, such as acetylcholine and adrenaline, were shown to be selectively bound to the same | |||
cellular site in some cells. It was primarily the drug industry that created and sustained the specific | |||
receptor doctrine. That doctrine suited the recognition of their public relations- marketing experts, that | |||
successful advertising had to be directed at the sixth-grade educational level. The ideas of bioelectronics | |||
and context-sensitive molecules, like morphogenetic fields, were just too complicated to sell well.Although | |||
metaphorical thinking can be creative and productive, metaphors mustn't be taken literally. The | |||
identification of multiple types of receptor for a given natural substance involves the use of different | |||
substances as metaphors or similes for the natural substance. That type of pharmacology is slowly being | |||
replaced by an attempt to understand state-dependent sensitivities. The energetic state of a cell, and of | |||
the whole organism, determines the meaning of events and conditions, such as the presence of the "regulatory | |||
substances."The receptor culture can be tentatively disregarded when thinking about the history of | |||
serotonin. In the 1930s Vittorio Erspamer identified an amine in the intestine, that caused the intestine to | |||
contract. Then a group in England extracted an amine from serum that caused blood vessels to contract, and | |||
identified its chemical nature. Later, Erspamer showed that the intestinal amine and the vascular amine were | |||
chemically the same. The English group who had identified the substance by extracting tons of beef blood, | |||
wanted to find sensitive ways to assay it for further studies, and in 1951 they gave a sample to a | |||
pharmacologist, John Gaddum, who tested its effects on tissues including blood vessels and rat | |||
uteruses.Gaddum tested the serotonin in combination with a variety of other drugs, including ergot | |||
derivatives, that he knew acted on smooth muscles, and very soon observed that LSD blocked the effects of | |||
serotonin. Since he knew that LSD produced mental effects (Sandoz had distributed samples of it to | |||
researchers in 1947), he reasoned that the brain might also contain serotonin, and by 1952 was able to | |||
demonstrate that it does contain small amounts of it. A couple of years later he suggested "that the mental | |||
effects of lysergic acid diethylamide are due to interference with the normal action of this HT [5- | |||
hydroxytryptamine, serotonin]." At the Rockefeller Institute in New York, Woolley and Shaw also saw the | |||
antagonistic effects on smooth muscle, and drew similar conclusions about the brain. Erspamer (Renic. sc. | |||
farmital. 1, 1, 1954) showed that LSD was a highly effective antagonist against the antidiuresis caused by | |||
serotonin (enteramine).Around the same time, in the early 1950s, several people recognized that the symptoms | |||
produced by administering an excess of serotonin were similar to those experienced by people with intestinal | |||
tumors called argentaffinomas or carcinoid tumors, which are usually in the small intestine or appendix. The | |||
normal intestine contains about 95% of the serotonin in the body (and the brain normally contains only about | |||
1%), and in the normal person only about 1% of the dietary tryptophan is converted to serotonin. But in an | |||
advanced case of carcinoid, 60% of the tryptophan can be turned into serotonin. Especially if the tumor has | |||
invaded the liver, the serotonin won't be destroyed by the liver in the usual way, and will circulate in the | |||
bloodstream at high levels, producing symptoms of flushing, sweating (sometimes dark-colored), diarrhea | |||
(serotonin stimulates small intestine smooth muscle, but inhibits the large [Bennett & Whitney, 1966]), | |||
nausea, anxiety, reduced urination, muscle and joint pains, and, in late stages, very often cardiovascular | |||
disease (especially inflammation, fibroma and calcification of the valves in the right side of the heart) | |||
and aggressive behavior (Russo, et al., 2004) and psychosis.Testing Gaddum's idea of antagonism between LSD | |||
and serotonin in humans, Montanari and Tonini found that intramuscular injections of serotonin antagonized | |||
the psychological effects of LSD. Other drugs, especially other ergot derivatives, were more successful than | |||
LSD in blocking the effects of serotonin (Dubach and Gsell, 1962). There have been suggestions that | |||
pregnancy hormones could control serotonin excess (McCullough and Myers, 1965). Since estrogen promotes | |||
serotonin, progesterone is likely to be the protective factor (Donner & Handa, 2009; Hiroi, et al., | |||
2006; Berman, et al., 2006; Bethea, et al., 2000).More recently (Spigset, et al., 2004), it was found that | |||
LSD binding to a presumed serotonin receptor was low in carcinoid patients, supporting the idea of | |||
antagonism between the substances, but in the older studies symptoms, rather than competition for binding to | |||
certain proteins, were the focus of attention. The effects produced by injections and oral doses of | |||
synthetic serotonin, and of substances that block the synthesis of serotonin, were studied in both animals | |||
and humans. When a symptom such as clotting, flushing, or diarrhea is produced by serotonin itself, or | |||
prevented by a blocker of serotonin synthesis, "receptors" aren't an issue.Aldous Huxley was one of the | |||
first people to think about the general biological meaning of drugs such as LSD. Referring to the ideas of | |||
Henri Bergson and William Blake, he suggested that the brain usually acts as a filter, or "reducing valve," | |||
to make us disregard most of the information we are receiving through our senses, and that the psychedelic | |||
drugs temporarily remove the filter, or open the sensory reducing valve. Bergson had suggested that the | |||
filter was a practical measure needed to allow us to focus on practical survival needs; Blake had suggested | |||
that the doors of perception were kept closed for cultural reasons.Some recent reviews have discussed the | |||
evidence supporting the serotonin system as primarily inhibitory and protective (Anne Frederickson, 1998, | |||
Neil Goodman, 2002). Goodman describes the serotonergic system as one of our "diffuse neuroregulatory | |||
systems," and suggests that drugs such as LSD weaken its inhibitory, filtering effect. (Jacobs, 1983, 1987: | |||
by changes in the effects of serotonin in the brain, produced by things that affect its synthesis, release, | |||
catabolism, or receptor action.) LSD depresses the rate of firing of serotonergic nerves in the raphe nuclei | |||
(Trulson and Jacobs, 1979) causing arousal similar to stimulation of the reticular formation, as if by | |||
facilitating sensory input into the reticular formation (Bowman and Rand, 1980).In European culture, some | |||
people--e.g., Plato, Descarte, Locke, Eccles, probably even B.F. Skinner--have believed that mind and body | |||
are essentially different things (analogous to computer hardware and its programs), while another | |||
tradition--Blake, Lamarck, Darwin, C.L. Morgan, Pavlov, Reich, C.R. Cloninger, for example--has emphasized | |||
the continuity of consciousness and character with the body.Understanding the authoritarian personality has | |||
been an important issue in the 20th century. Wilhelm Reich used some old ideas about the nervous system that | |||
were current near the beginning of the century, and Cloninger (1995) and others (Netter, et al., 1996, | |||
Ruegg, et al., 1997, Gerra, 2000), toward the end of the century, were able to incorporate the newer | |||
information about the serotonergic-dopaminergic antagonisms. In this newer view, high serotonin production | |||
causes behavioral inhibition and harm avoidance, which are traits of the authoritarian personality, while | |||
anti-authorians tend to have "novelty seeking" personalities, with high dopamine and low serotonin | |||
functions.In the 1960s, experimenters put electrodes into a chicken's optic nerve, and when the chicken saw | |||
a checkerboard pattern, they could measure a patterned electrical activity in the nerve. Without the light | |||
stimulating the retina, the nerve was quiet. But when they gave the chicken LSD or similar chemicals, they | |||
recorded patterned electrical activity in the nerve, in the absence of external stimulation. Around the same | |||
time, other experimenters showed that retinal fatigue quickly desensitized the retina, preventing the | |||
transmission of impulses to the brain, except when the light pattern corresponded to something familiar, | |||
showing that impulses from the brain are always involved in renewing, in patterned ways, the sensitivity of | |||
the retina.The latter experiment shows that everyone's perception involves an outward-directed activity of | |||
the brain, and the experiments using the chemical stimulants suggested that the intensity of the outward- | |||
directed action can vary.The inhibitory serotonergic "harm avoidance" system, and the opposing excitatory | |||
activating "novelty seeking" systems are constantly being influenced by many factors, including nutrition, | |||
hormones, environmental challenges and opportunities, social interactions, seasons, and the rhythm of night | |||
and day alternation.Several kinds of research are now showing that the effects of the environment on the | |||
serotonergic system and its antagonists can influence every aspect of health, not just the personality.For | |||
example, there have been suggestions that early life isolation of an animal can affect its serotonergic | |||
activity and increase its anxiety, aggression, or susceptibility to stress (Malick and Barnett, 1976, | |||
Malick, 1979, dos Santos, et al, 2010), and these effects are associated with increased risk of becoming | |||
depressed, and developing organic problems. Animals kept in darkness (or with blurring lenses) become | |||
nearsighted, as the eyeball grows longer under the influence of increased serotonin, and the eyes are | |||
protected against myopia by serotonin antagonists (George, et al., 2005). The incidence of myopia is | |||
increasing, at least in countries with industrialized economies, and is more common in females.Migraine | |||
headaches are also increasing in incidence. By the end of the 1950s, it was widely accepted that migraine | |||
headaches and associated symptoms including nausea and visual disturbances were caused by an excess of | |||
serotonin, and antiserotonin drugs of various types were being used for treatment. In one of the early | |||
studies of the use of LSD in psychotherapy, some of the patients noticed that their chronic headaches had | |||
stopped. Cluster headaches have also responded well to LSD and similar drugs (Sewell, et al., 2006).Women | |||
have migraines more often than men do, and they tend to occur in association with ovulation or menstruation. | |||
Estrogen inhibits monoamino oxidase, MAO, especially the A form that is most active in detoxifying | |||
serotonin, and it increases the enzymes that control the rate of serotonin synthesis. During serotonin | |||
excess, the veins and capillaries of the pia mater are engorged with blood, while circulation to the brain | |||
generally is depressed. Visual symptoms are probably produced by contriction of arterioles, while the pain | |||
is associated with engorged veins. Progesterone activates the MAO-A, and has other antiserotonin effects on | |||
blood vessels and nerves.Recently (Shansky, et al., 2010; Figueiredo, et al., 2007), females have been found | |||
to be more susceptible to stress, and to have reduced uptake of serotonin (prolonging its effects), which | |||
increases glucocorticoids and ACTH. Kendler, et al. (2005) have found that people with reduced serotonin | |||
uptake are more susceptible to stress-induced depression.The increase of inhibitory serotonin with stress | |||
and depression is probably biologically related to the role of serotonin in hibernation, which is an extreme | |||
example of "harm avoidance" by withdrawal. A diet high in polyunsaturated fat increases the tendency to go | |||
into hibernation, probably by increasing the brain's uptake of tryptophan. When this is combined with an | |||
increasingly cold environment, the form of MAO that removes serotonin decreases its activity, while the form | |||
that removes norepinephrine increases its activity. The metabolite of serotonin, 5-HIAA, decreases, as the | |||
effect of serotonin increases.In experiments to investigate the mechanism of hibernation, animals were | |||
injected with serotonin, at different environmental temperatures. In a cool environment, the serotonin | |||
caused their temperature to fall, by decreasing their heat production, and increasing their loss of heat (by | |||
causing vasodilation in the skin, "flushing"). In a hot environment, serotonin can cause the animal's | |||
temperature to rise.Serotonin can reduce the production of energy by inhibiting mitochondrial respiratory | |||
enzymes (Medvedev, 1990, 1991), and by reduction of oxygen delivery to tissues by vasoconstriction. It also | |||
appears to interfere with the use of glucose (de Leiva, et al., 1978, Moore, et al., 2004).The brains of | |||
people with Alzheimer's disease have a decreased ability to metabolize glucose, and high cortisol | |||
contributes to the altered glucose metabolism, and to the destruction of nerve cells. People with | |||
Cloninger's "harm avoidance" personality trait, which is closely associated with serotonin (Hansenne, et | |||
al., 1999), are more likely to develop dementia (Clément, et al., 2010). These observations are consistent | |||
with the stress-susceptibility of people with high serotonin exposure, and to the effects of cortisol on | |||
nerves and glucose-derived energy production.Researchers in Brasil have suggested that the serotonergic | |||
system facilitates conditioned fear, while inhibiting the fight or flight reaction, and that this can | |||
protectively limit the stress response (Graeff, et al., 1996). "5HT systems reduce the impact of impending | |||
or actual aversive events. Anticipation of an aversive event is associated with anxiety and this motivates | |||
avoidance behaviour" (Deakin, 1990). In a stressful situation, the serotonergic nerves can prevent ulcers. | |||
In other contexts, though, increased serotonin can cause ulcers.The protective, defensive reactions | |||
involving serotonin's blocking of certain types of reaction to ordinary stresses, are similar to the effects | |||
of serotonin in hibernation and in Alzheimer's disease (Mamelak, 1997; Heininger, 2000; Perry, et al., | |||
2002). In those extreme conditions, serotonin reduces energy expenditure, eliminating all brain functions | |||
except those needed for simple survival. These parallels suggest that improving energy production, for | |||
example by providing ketones as an alternative energy source, while reducing the stress hormones, might be | |||
able to replace the defensive reactions with restorative adaptive nerve processes, preventing or reversing | |||
Alzheimer's disease.One of the factors promoting excess cortisol production is intestinal irritation, | |||
causing absorption of endotoxin and serotonin. Fermentable fibers (including pectins and | |||
fructooligosaccharides) support the formation of bacterial toxins, and can cause animals to become anxious | |||
and aggressive. Fed to horses, some types of fiber increase the amount of serotonin circulating in the | |||
blood. Grains, beans, and other seeds contain fermentable fibers that can promote intestinal irritation.The | |||
liver has several ways to detoxify endotoxin and serotonin, but these can fail as a result of poor nutrition | |||
and hypothyroidism.The lung can bind and destroy any excess serotonin that reaches it. A lack of carbon | |||
dioxide makes platelets release their stored serotonin, and it probably has the same effect in the lung | |||
endothelial cells. Without being able to bind the serotonin, the enzyme (indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase) would | |||
be unable to destroy it.An excess of tryptophan in the diet, especially with deficiencies of other | |||
nutrients, can combine with inflammation to increase serotonin. Polyunsaturated fatty acids promote the | |||
absorption of tryptophan by the brain, and its conversion to serotonin. (A "deficiency" of polyunsaturated | |||
fat decreases the expression of the enzyme that synthesizes serotonin [McNamara, et al., 2009).Some fruits, | |||
including bananas, pineapples, and tomatoes, contain enough serotonin to produce physiological effects in | |||
susceptible people.Besides avoiding foods containing fermentable fibers and starches that resist quick | |||
digestion, eating fibrous foods that contain antibacterial chemicals, such as bamboo shoots or raw carrots, | |||
helps to reduce endotoxin and serotonin. Activated charcoal can absorb many toxins, including bacterial | |||
endotoxin, so it is likely to reduce serotonin absorption from the intestine. Since it can also bind or | |||
destroy vitamins, it should be used only intermittently. Frolkis, et al. (1989, 1984) found that it extended | |||
median and average lifespan of rats, beginning in old age (28 months) by 43% and 34%, respectively, when | |||
given in large quantities (equivalent to about a cup per day for humans) for ten days of each month.The | |||
amino acid theanine, found in tea, has been reported to decrease the amount of serotonin in the brain, | |||
probably by decreasing its synthesis and increasing its degradation. This seems to be the opposite of | |||
the processes in hibernation. Progesterone, thyroid, and niacinamide (not nicotinic acid or inositol | |||
hexanicotinate) are other safe substances that help to reduce serotonin formation, and/or accelerate its | |||
elimination. (Niacinamide seems to increase serotonin uptake.)To provide usable energy to the over-stressed | |||
brain (and heart), R.L. Veech has advocated the use of ketones, but the pure chemicals are expensive to | |||
make. An easily available and inexpensive source of ketones (in the form of ketoacids, which can be | |||
converted to amino acids if they aren't needed for energy) is the juice extracted (with a centrifugal | |||
juicer) from raw potatoes, which also contains proteins and other nutrients. The juice can be scrambled like | |||
eggs, and is usually tolerated even by very debilitated people.Hypothyroidism is a very common cause of | |||
increased serotonin (e.g., Henley, et al., 1998), and if the thyroid hormone is supplemented until symptoms | |||
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5-HT-related drugs and human experimental anxiety. Zuardi AW. | |||
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<p></p>Since the first doctor noticed, hundreds of years ago, that the urine of a diabetic patient tasted sweet, | |||
it has been common to call the condition the sugar disease, or sugar diabetes, and since nothing was known about | |||
physiological chemistry, it was commonly believed that eating too much sugar had to be the cause, since the | |||
ability of the body to convert the protein in tissues into sugar wasn"t discovered until 1848, by Claude Bernard | |||
(who realized that diabetics lost more sugar than they took in). Even though patients continued to pass sugar in | |||
their urine until they died, despite the elimination of sugar from their diet, medical policy required that they | |||
be restrained to keep them from eating sugar. That prescientific medical belief, that eating sugar causes | |||
diabetes, is still held by a very large number, probably the majority, of physicians. Originally, diabetes was | |||
understood to be a wasting disease, but as it became common for doctors to measure glucose, obese people were | |||
often found to have hyperglycemia, so the name diabetes has been extended to them, as type 2 diabetes. High | |||
blood sugar is often seen along with high blood pressure and obesity in Cushing's syndrome, with excess | |||
cortisol, and these features are also used to define the newer metabolic syndrome. Following the old reasoning | |||
about the sugar disease, the newer kind of obese diabetes is commonly blamed on eating too much sugar. Obesity, | |||
especially a fat waist, and all its associated health problems, are said by some doctors to be the result of | |||
eating too much sugar, especially fructose. (Starch is the only common carbohydrate that contains no fructose.) | |||
Obesity is associated not only with diabetes or insulin resistance, but also with atheroslcerosis and heart | |||
disease, high blood pressure, generalized inflammation, arthritis, depression, risk of dementia, and cancer. | |||
There is general agreement about the problems commonly associated with obesity, but not about the causes or the | |||
way to prevent or cure obesity and the associated conditions. In an earlier newsletter, I wrote about P. A. | |||
Piorry in Paris, in 1864, and Dr. William Budd in England, in 1867, who treated diabetes by adding a large | |||
amount of ordinary sugar, sucrose, to the patient's diet. Glucose was known to be the sugar appearing in the | |||
diabetics' urine, but sucrose consists of half glucose, and half fructose. In 1874, E. Kulz in Germany reported | |||
that diabetics could assimilate fructose better than glucose. In the next decades there were several more | |||
reports on the benefits of feeding fructose, including the reduction of glucose in the urine. With the discovery | |||
of insulin in 1922, fructose therapy was practically forgotten, until the 1950s when new manufacturing | |||
techniques began to make it economical to use. Its use in diabetic diets became so popular that it became | |||
available in health food stores, and was also used in hospitals for intravenous feeding. However, while fructose | |||
was becoming popular, the cholesterol theory of heart disease was being promoted. This was the theory that | |||
eating foods containing saturated fat and cholesterol caused heart disease. (My newsletter, Cholesterol, | |||
longevity, intelligence, and health, discussed the development of that theory.) A Swedish physician and | |||
researcher, Uffe Ravnskov, has reviewed the medical arguments for the theory that lipids in the blood are the | |||
cause of atherosclerosis and heart disease, and shows that there has never been evidence of causality, something | |||
which some people, such as Broda Barnes, understood from the beginning. In the 1950s, an English professor, John | |||
Yudkin, didn't accept the idea that eating saturated fat was the cause of high blood levels of triglycerides and | |||
cholesterol, but he didn"t question the theory that lipids in the blood caused the circulatory disease. He | |||
argued that it was sugar, especially the fructose component of sucrose, rather than dietary fat, that caused the | |||
high blood lipids seen in the affluent countries, and consequently the diseases. He was sure it was a specific | |||
chemical effect of the fructose, because he argued that the nutrients that were removed in refining white flour | |||
and white sugar were insignificant, in the whole diet. Following the publication of Yudkin's books, and | |||
coinciding with increasing promotion of the health benefits of unsaturated vegetable oils, many people were | |||
converted to Yudkin's version of the lipid theory of heart disease, i.e., that the "bad lipids" in the blood are | |||
the result of eating sugar. This has grown into essentially a cult, in which sugar is believed to act like an | |||
intoxicant, forcing people to eat until they become obese, and develop the "metabolic syndrome," and "diabetes," | |||
and the many problems that derive from that. The publicity campaign against "saturated fat" as an ally of | |||
cholesterol derived its support from the commercial promotion of the polyunsaturated seed oils as food for | |||
humans. Although the early investigators of vitamin E knew that the polyunsaturated oils could cause sterility, | |||
and others later found that their use in commercial animal foods could cause brain degeneration, there were a | |||
few biologists (mostly associated with George Burr) who believed that this type of fatty acid is an essential | |||
nutrient. George and Mildred Burr had created what they claimed to be a disease in rats caused by the absence of | |||
linoleic or linolenic acid in their food. Although well known researchers had previously published evidence that | |||
animals on a fat free diet were healthy--even healthier than on a normal diet--Burr and his wife published their | |||
contradictory claim without bothering to discuss the conflicting evidence. I haven't seen any instance in which | |||
Burr or his followers ever mentioned the conflicting evidence. Although other biologists didn't accept Burr's | |||
claims, and several researchers subsequently published contrary results, he later became famous when the seed | |||
oil industry wanted scientific-seeming reasons for selling their product as an "essential" food. The fact that | |||
eating the polyunsaturated fats could cause the blood cholesterol level to decrease slightly was advertised as a | |||
health benefit. Later, when human trials showed that more people on the "heart healthy" diet died of heart | |||
disease and cancer, more conventional means of advertising were used instead of human tests. Burr's experimental | |||
diet consisted of purified casein (milk protein) and purified sucrose, supplemented with a vitamin concentrate | |||
and some minerals. Several of the B vitamins weren't known at the time, and the mineral mixture lacked zinc, | |||
copper, manganese, molybdenum, and selenium. More of the essential nutrients were unknown in his time than in | |||
Yudkin's, so his failure to consider the possibility of other nutritional deficiencies affecting health is more | |||
understandable. In 1933, Burr observed that his fat-deficient rats consumed oxygen at an extremely high rate, | |||
and even then, the thought didn't occur to him that other nutritional deficiencies might have been involved in | |||
the condition he described. Ordinarily, the need for vitamins and minerals corresponds to the rate at which | |||
calories are being burned, the metabolic rate. Burr recalled that the rats on the fat free diet drank more | |||
water, and he reasoned that the absence of linoleic or linolenic acid in their skin was allowing water vapor to | |||
escape at a high rate. He didn't explain why the saturated fats the rats were synthesizing from sugar didn't | |||
serve at least as well as a "vapor barrier"; they are more effective at water-proofing than unsaturated fats, | |||
because of their greater hydrophobicity. The condensed and cross-linked keratin protein in skin cells is the | |||
main reason for the skin's relatively low permeability. When an animal is burning calories at a higher rate, its | |||
sweat glands are more actively maintaining a normal body temperature, cooling by evaporation; the amount of | |||
water evaporated is an approximate measure of metabolic rate, and of thyroid function. In 1936, a man in Burr's | |||
lab, William Brown, agreed to eat a similar diet for six months, to see whether the "essential fatty acid | |||
deficiency" affected humans as it did rats. The diet was very similar to the rats', with a large part of the | |||
daily 2500 calories being provided at hourly intervals during the day by sugar syrup (flavored with citric acid | |||
and anise oil), protein from 4 quarts of special fat-free skimmed milk, a quart of which was made into cottage | |||
cheese, the juice of half an orange, and a "biscuit" made with potato starch, baking powder, mineral oil, and | |||
salt, with iron, viosterol (vitamin D), and carotene supplemented. Brown had suffered from weekly migraine | |||
headaches since childhood, and his blood pressure was a little high when he began the diet. After six weeks on | |||
the diet, his migraines stopped, and never returned. His plasma inorganic phosphorus declined slightly during | |||
the experiment (3.43 mg./100 cc. of plasma and 2.64 on the diet, and after six months on a normal diet 4.2 | |||
mg.%), and his total serum proteins increased from 6.98 gm.% to 8.06 gm.% on the experimental diet. His | |||
leucocyte count was lower on the high sugar diet, but he didn't experience colds or other sickness. On a normal | |||
diet, his systolic blood pressure varied from 140 to 150 mm. of mercury, the diastolic, 95 to 100. After a few | |||
months on the sugar and milk diet, his blood pressure had lowered to about 130 over 85 to 88. Several months | |||
after he returned to a normal diet, his blood pressure rose to the previous level. On a normal diet, his weight | |||
was 152 pounds, and his metabolic rate was from 9% to 12% below normal, but after six months on the diet it had | |||
increased to 2% below normal. After three months on the sugar and milk diet, his weight leveled off at 138 | |||
pounds. After being on the diet, when he ate 2000 calories of sugar and milk within two hours, his respiratory | |||
quotient would exceed 1.0, but on his normal diet his maximum respiratory quotient following those foods was | |||
less than 1.0. The effect of diabetes is to keep the respiratory quotient low, since a respiratory quotient of | |||
one corresponds to the oxidation of pure carbohydrate, and extreme diabetics oxidize fat in preference to | |||
carbohydrate, and may have a quotient just a little above 0.7. The results of Brown's and Burr's experiments | |||
could be interpreted to mean that the polyunsaturated fats not only lower the metabolic rate, but especially | |||
interfere with the metabolism of sugars. In other words, they suggest that the normal diet is diabetogenic. | |||
During the six months of the experiment, the unsaturation of Brown's serum lipids decreased. The authors | |||
reported that "There was no essential change in the serum cholesterol as a result of the change in diet." | |||
However, in November and December, two months before the experiment began, it had been 252 mg.% in two | |||
measurements. At the beginning of the test, it was 298, two weeks later, 228, and four months later, 206 mg%. | |||
The total quantity of lipids in his blood didn't seem to change much, since the triglycerides increased as the | |||
cholesterol decreased. By the time of Brown's experiment, other researchers had demonstrated that the | |||
cholesterol level was increased in hypothyroidism, and decreased as thyroid function, and oxygen consumption, | |||
increased. If Burr's team had been reading the medical literature, they would have understood the relation | |||
between Brown's increased metabolic rate and decreased cholesterol level. But they did record the facts, which | |||
is valuable. The authors wrote that "The most interesting subjective effect of the 'fat-free' regimen was the | |||
definite disappearance of a feeling of fatigue at the end of the day's work." A lowered metabolic rate and | |||
energy production is a common feature of aging and most degenerative diseases. From the beginning of an animal's | |||
life, sugars are the primary source of energy, and with maturation and aging there is a shift toward replacing | |||
sugar oxidation with fat oxidation. Old people are able to metabolize fat at the same rate as younger people, | |||
but their overall metabolic rate is lower, because they are unable to oxidize sugar at the same high rate as | |||
young people. Fat people have a similar selectively reduced ability to oxidize sugar. Stress and starvation lead | |||
to a relative reliance on the fats stored in the tissues, and the mobilization of these as circulating free | |||
fatty acids contributes to a slowing of metabolism and a shift away from the use of glucose for energy. This is | |||
adaptive in the short term, since relatively little glucose is stored in the tissues (as glycogen), and the | |||
proteins making up the body would be rapidly consumed for energy, if it were not for the reduced energy demands | |||
resulting from the effects of the free fatty acids. One of the points at which fatty acids suppress the use of | |||
glucose is at the point at which it is converted into fructose, in the process of glycolysis. When fructose is | |||
available, it can by-pass this barrier to the use of glucose, and continue to provide pyruvic acid for | |||
continuing oxidative metabolism, and if the mitochondria themselves aren't providing sufficient energy, it can | |||
leave the cell as lactate, allowing continuing glycolytic energy production. In the brain, this can sustain life | |||
in an emergency. Many people lately have been told, as part of a campaign to explain the high incidence of fatty | |||
liver degeneration in the US, supposedly resulting from eating too much sugar, that fructose can be metabolized | |||
only by the liver. The liver does have the highest capacity for metabolizing fructose, but the other organs do | |||
metabolize it. If fructose can by-pass the fatty acids' inhibition of glucose metabolism, to be oxidized when | |||
glucose can't, and if the metabolism of diabetes involves the oxidation of fatty acids instead of glucose, then | |||
we would expect there to be less than the normal amount of fructose in the serum of diabetics, although their | |||
defining trait is the presence of an increased amount of glucose. According to Osuagwu and Madumere (2008), that | |||
is the case. If a fructose deficiency exists in diabetes, then it is appropriate to supplement it in the diet. | |||
Besides being one of the forms of sugar involved in ordinary energy production, interchangeable with glucose, | |||
fructose has some special functions, that aren't as well performed by glucose. It is the main sugar involved in | |||
reproduction, in the seminal fluid and intrauterine fluid, and in the developing fetus. After these crucial | |||
stages of life are past, glucose becomes the primary molecular source of energy, except when the system is under | |||
stress. It has been suggested (Jauniaux, et al., 2005) that the predominance of fructose rather than glucose in | |||
the embryo's environment helps to maintain ATP and the oxidative state (cellular redox potential) during | |||
development in the low-oxygen environment. The placenta turns glucose from the mother's blood into fructose, and | |||
the fructose in the mother's blood can pass through into the fetus, and although glucose can move back from the | |||
fetus into the mother's blood, fructose is unable to move in that direction, so a high concentration is | |||
maintained in the fluids around the fetus. The control of the redox potential is sometimes called the "redox | |||
signalling system," since it coherently affects all processes and conditions in the cell, including pH and | |||
hydrophobicity. For example, when a cell prepares to divide, the balance shifts strongly away from the oxidative | |||
condition, with increases in the ratios of NADH to NAD+, of GSH to GSSG, and of lactate to pyruvate. These same | |||
shifts occur during most kinds of stress. In natural stress, decreased availability of oxygen or nutrients is | |||
often the key problem, and many poisons can produce similar interference with energy production, for example | |||
cyanide or carbon monoxide, which block the use of oxygen, or ethanol, which inhibits the oxidation of sugars, | |||
fats, and amino acids (Shelmet, et al., 1988). When oxygen isn't constantly removing electrons from cells (being | |||
chemically reduced by them) those electrons will react elsewhere, creating free radicals (including activated | |||
oxygen) and reduced iron, that will create inappropriate chemical reactions (Niknahad, et al., 1995; | |||
MacAllister, et al., 2011). Stresses and poisons of many different types, interfering with the normal flow of | |||
electrons to oxygen, produce large amounts of free radicals, which can spread structural and chemical damage, | |||
involving all systems of the cell. Ethyl alcohol is a common potentially toxic substance that can have this | |||
effect, causing oxidative damage by allowing an excess of electrons to accumulate in the cell, shifting the | |||
cells' balance away from the stable oxidized state. Fructose has been known for many years to accelerate the | |||
oxidation of ethanol (by about 80%). Oxygen consumption in the presence of ethanol is increased by fructose more | |||
than by glucose (Thieden and Lundquist, 1967). Besides removing the alcohol from the body more quickly, it | |||
prevents the oxidative damage, by maintaining or restoring the cell's redox balance, the relatively oxidized | |||
state of the NADH/NAD+, lactate/pyruvate, and GSH/GSSH systems. Although glucose has this stabilizing, | |||
pro-oxidative function in many situations, this is a general feature of fructose, sometimes allowing it to have | |||
the opposite effect of glucose on the cell's redox state. It seems to be largely this generalized shift of the | |||
cell's redox state towards oxidation that is behind the ability of a small amount of fructose to catalyze the | |||
more rapid oxidation of a large amount of glucose. Besides protecting against the reductive stresses, fructose | |||
can also protect against the oxidative stress of increased hydrogen peroxide (Spasojevic, et al., 2009). Its | |||
metabolite, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, is even more effective as an antioxidant. Keeping the metabolic rate high | |||
has many benefits, including the rapid renewal of cells and their components, such as cholesterol and other | |||
lipids, and proteins, which are always susceptible to damage from oxidants, but the high metabolic rate also | |||
tends to keep the redox system in the proper balance, reducing the rate of oxidative damage. Endotoxin absorbed | |||
from the intestine is one of the ubiquitous stresses that tends to cause free radical damage. Fructose, probably | |||
more than glucose, is protective against damage from endotoxin. Many stressors cause capillary leakage, allowing | |||
albumin and other blood components to enter extracellular spaces or to be lost in the urine, and this is a | |||
feature of diabetes, obesity, and a variety of inflammatory and degenerative diseases including Alzheimer's | |||
disease (Szekanecz and Koch, 2008; Ujiie, et al., 2003). Although the mechanism isn't understood, fructose | |||
supports capillary integrity; fructose feeding for 4 and 8 weeks caused a 56% and 51% reduction in capillary | |||
leakage, respectively (Chakir, et al., 1998; Plante, et al., 2003). The ability of the mitochondria to oxidize | |||
pyruvic acid and glucose is characteristically lost to some degree in cancer. When this oxidation fails, the | |||
disturbed redox balance of the cell will usually lead to the cell's death, but if it can survive, this balance | |||
favors growth and cell division, rather than differentiated function. This was Otto Warburg's discovery, that | |||
was rejected by official medicine for 75 years. Cancer researchers have become interested in this enzyme system | |||
that controls the oxidation of pyruvic acid (and thus sugar) by the mitochondria, since these enzymes are | |||
crucially defective in cancer cells (and also in diabetes). The chemical DCA, dichloroacetate, is effective | |||
against a variety of cancers, and it acts by reactivating the enzymes that oxidize pyruvic acid. Thyroid | |||
hormone, insulin, and fructose also activate these enzymes. These are the enzymes that are inactivated by | |||
excessive exposure to fatty acids, and that are involved in the progressive replacement of sugar oxidation by | |||
fat oxidation, during stress and aging, and in degenerative diseases; for example, a process that inactivates | |||
the energy-producing pyruvate dehydrogenase in Alzheimer's disease has been identified (Ishiguro, 1998). | |||
Niacinamide, by lowering free fatty acids and regulating the redox system, supporting sugar oxidation, is useful | |||
in the whole spectrum of metabolic degenerative diseases. A few times in the last 80 years, people (starting | |||
with Nasonov) have recognized that the hydrophobicity of a cell changes with its degree of excitation, and with | |||
its energy level. Recently, even in non-living physical-chemical systems, hydrophobicity and redox potential | |||
have been seen to vary together and to influence each other. Recent work shows how the oxidation of fatty acids | |||
contributes to the dissolution of mitochondria (Macchioni, et al., 2010). At first glance it might seem odd that | |||
the presence of fatty material could reduce the "fat loving" (lipophilic, equivalent to hydrophobic) property of | |||
a cell, but the fat used as fuel is in the form of fatty acids, which are soap-like, and spontaneously introduce | |||
"wetness" into the relatively water-resistant cell substance. The presence of fatty acids, impairing the last | |||
oxidative stage of respiration, increases the tendency of the mitochondrion to release its cytochrome c into the | |||
cell in a reduced form, leading to the apoptotic death of the cell. The oxidized form of the cytochrome is more | |||
hydrophobic, and stable. Burr didn't understand that it was his rats' high sugar diet, freed of the | |||
anti-oxidative unsaturated fatty acids, that caused their extremely high metabolic rate, but since that time | |||
many experiments have made it clear that it is specifically the fructose component of sucrose that is protective | |||
against the antimetabolic fats. Although Brown, et al., weren't focusing on the biological effects of sugar, | |||
their results are important in the history of sugar research because their work was done before the culture had | |||
been influenced by the development of the lipid theory of heart disease, and the later idea that fructose is | |||
responsible for increasing the blood lipids. In 1963 and 1964, experiments (Carroll, 1964) showed that the | |||
effects of glucose and fructose were radically affected by the type of fat in the diet. Although 0.6% of | |||
calories as polyunsaturated fat prevents the appearance of the Mead acid (which is considered to indicate a | |||
deficiency of essential fats) the "high fructose" diets consistently add 10% or more corn oil or other highly | |||
unsaturated fat to the diet. These large quantities of PUFA aren't necessary to prevent a deficiency, but they | |||
are needed to obscure the beneficial effects of fructose. Many studies have found that sucrose is less fattening | |||
than starch or glucose, that is, that more calories can be consumed without gaining weight. During exercise, the | |||
addition of fructose to glucose increases the oxidation of carbohydrate by about 50% (Jentjens and Jeukendrup, | |||
2005). In another experiment, rats were fed either sucrose or Coca-Cola and Purina chow, and were allowed to eat | |||
as much as they wanted (Bukowiecki, et al, 1983). They consumed 50% more calories without gaining extra weight, | |||
relative to the standard diet. Ruzzin, et al. (2005) observed rats given a 10.5% or 35% sucrose solution, or | |||
water, and observed that the sucrose increased their energy consumption by about 15% without increasing weight | |||
gain. Macor, et al. (1990) found that glucose caused a smaller increase in metabolic rate in obese people than | |||
in normal weight people, but that fructose increased their metabolic rate as much as it did that of the normal | |||
weight people. Tappy, et al. (1993) saw a similar increase in heat production in obese people, relative to the | |||
effect of glucose. Brundin, et al. (1993) compared the effects of glucose and fructose in healthy people, and | |||
saw a greater oxygen consumption with fructose, and also an increase in the temperature of the blood, and a | |||
greater increase in carbon dioxide production. These metabolic effects have led several groups to recommend the | |||
use of fructose for treating shock, the stress of surgery, or infection (e.g., Adolph, et al., 1995). The | |||
commonly recommended alternative to sugar in the diet is starch, but many studies show that it produces all of | |||
the effects that are commonly ascribed to sucrose and fructose, for example hyperglycemia (Villaume, et al., | |||
1984) and increased weight gain. The addition of fructose to glucose "can markedly reduce hyperglycemia during | |||
intraportal glucose infusion by increasing net hepatic glucose uptake even when insulin secretion is | |||
compromised" (Shiota, et al., 2005). "Fructose appears most effective in those normal individuals who have the | |||
poorest glucose tolerance" (Moore, et al., 2000). Lipid peroxidation is involved in the degenerative diseases, | |||
and many publications argue that fructose increases it, despite the fact that it can increase the production of | |||
uric acid, which is a major component of our endogenous antioxidant system (e.g., Waring, et al., 2003). When | |||
rats were fed for 8 weeks on a diet with 18% fructose and 11% saturated fatty acids, the content of | |||
polyunsatured fats in the blood decreased, as they had in the Brown, et al., experiment, and their total | |||
antioxidant status was increased (Girard, et al., 2005). When stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats were | |||
given 60% fructose, superoxide dismutase in their liver was increased, and the authors suggest that this "may | |||
constitute an early protective mechanism" (Brosnan and Carkner, 2008). When people were given a 300 calorie | |||
drink containing glucose, or fructose, or orange juice, those receiving the glucose had a large increase in | |||
oxidative and inflammatory stress (reactive oxygen species, and NF-kappaB binding), and those changes were | |||
absent in those receiving the fructose or orange juice (Ghanim, et al., 2007). One of the observations in Brown, | |||
et al., was that the level of phosphate in the serum decreased during the experimental diet. Several later | |||
studies show that fructose increases the excretion of phosphate in the urine, while decreasing the level in the | |||
serum. However, a common opinion is that it's only the phosphorylation of fructose, increasing the amount in | |||
cells, that causes the decrease in the serum; that could account for the momentary drop in serum phosphate | |||
during a fructose load, but--since there is only so much phosphate that can be bound to intracellular | |||
fructose--it can't account for the chronic depression of the serum phosphate on a continuing diet of fructose or | |||
sucrose. There are many reasons to think that a slight reduction of serum phosphate would be beneficial. It has | |||
been suggested that eating fruit is protective against prostate cancer, by lowering serum phosphate (Kapur, | |||
2000). The aging suppressing gene discovered in 1997, named after the Greek life-promoting goddess Klotho, | |||
suppresses the reabsorption of phosphate by the kidney (which is also a function of the parathyroid hormone), | |||
and inhibits the formation of the activated form of vitamin D, opposing the effect of the parathyroid hormone. | |||
In the absence of the gene, serum phosphate is high, and the animal ages and dies prematurely. In humans, in | |||
recent years a very close association has been has been documented between increased phosphate levels, within | |||
the normal range, and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Serum phosphate is increased in people with | |||
osteoporosis (Gallagher, et al., 1980), and various treatments that lower serum phosphate improve bone | |||
mineralization, with the retention of calcium phosphate (Ma and Fu, 2010; Batista, et al., 2010; Kelly, et al., | |||
1967; Parfitt, 1965; Kim, et al., 2003). At high altitude, or when taking a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, there | |||
is more carbon dioxide in the blood, and the serum phosphate is lower; sucrose and fructose increase the | |||
respiratory quotient and carbon dioxide production, and this is probably a factor in lowering the serum | |||
phosphate. Fructose affects the body's ability to retain other nutrients, including magnesium, copper, calcium, | |||
and other minerals. Comparing diets with 20% of the calories from fructose or from cornstarch, Holbrook, et al. | |||
(1989) concluded "The results indicate that dietary fructose enhances mineral balance." Ordinarily, things (such | |||
as thyroid and vitamin D) which improve the retention of magnesium and other nutrients are considered good, but | |||
the fructose mythology allows researchers to conclude, after finding an increased magnesium balance, with either | |||
4% or 20% of energy from fructose (compared to cornstarch, bread, and rice), "that dietary fructose adversely | |||
affects macromineral homeostasis in humans." (Milne and Nielsen, 2000). Another study compared the effects of a | |||
diet with plain water, or water containing 13% glucose, or sucrose, or fructose, or high fructose corn syrup on | |||
the properties of rats' bones: Bone mineral density and mineral content, and bone strength, and mineral balance. | |||
The largest differences were between animals drinking the glucose and the fructose solutions. The rats getting | |||
the glucose had reduced phosphorus in their bones, and more calcium in their urine, than the rats that got | |||
fructose. "The results suggested that glucose rather than fructose exerted more deleterious effects on mineral | |||
balance and bone" (Tsanzi, et al., 2008). An older experiment compared two groups with an otherwise well | |||
balanced diet, lacking vitamin D, containing either 68% starch or 68% sucrose. A third group got the starch | |||
diet, but with added vitamin D. The rats on the vitamin D deficient starch diet had very low levels of calcium | |||
in their blood, and the calcium content of their bones was low, exactly what is expected with the vitamin D | |||
deficiency. However, the rats on the sucrose diet, also vitamin D deficient, had normal levels of calcium in | |||
their blood. The sucrose, unlike the starch, maintained claim homeostasis. A radioactive calcium tracer showed | |||
normal uptake by the bone, and also apparently normal bone development, although their bones were lighter than | |||
those receiving vitamin D. People have told me that when they looked for articles on fructose in PubMed they | |||
couldn't find anything except articles about its bad effects. There are two reasons for that. PubMed, like the | |||
earlier Index Medicus, represents the material in the National Library of Medicine, and is a medical, rather | |||
than a scientific, database, and there is a large amount of important research that it ignores. And because of | |||
the authoritarian and conformist nature of the medical profession, when a researcher observes something that is | |||
contrary to majority opinion, the title of the publication is unlikely to focus on that. In too many articles in | |||
medical journals, the title and conclusions positively misrepresent the data reported in the article. When the | |||
idea of "glycemic index" was being popularized by dietitians, it was already known that starch, consisting of | |||
chains of glucose molecules, had a much higher index than fructose and sucrose. The more rapid appearance of | |||
glucose in the blood stimulates more insulin, and insulin stimulates fat synthesis, when there is more glucose | |||
than can be oxidized immediately. If starch or glucose is eaten at the same time as polyunsaturated fats, which | |||
inhibit its oxidation, it will produce more fat. Many animal experiments show this, even when they are intending | |||
to show the dangers of fructose and sucrose. For example (Thresher, et al., 2000), rats were fed diets with 68% | |||
carbohydrate, 12% fat (corn oil), and 20% protein. In one group the carbohydrate was starch (cornstarch and | |||
maltodextrin, with a glucose equivalence of 10%), and in other groups it was either 68% sucrose, or 34% fructose | |||
and 34% glucose, or 34% fructose and 34% starch. (An interesting oddity, fasting triglycerides were highest in | |||
the fructose+starch group.) The weight of their fat pads (epididymal, retroperitoneal, and mesenteric) was | |||
greatest in the fructose+starch group, and least in the sucrose group. The starch group's fat was intermediate | |||
in weight between those of the sucrose and the fructose+glucose groups. At the beginning of the experimental | |||
diet, the average weight of the animals was 213.1 grams. After five weeks, the animals in the fructose+glucose | |||
group gained 164 grams, those in the sucrose group gained 177 grams, and those in the starch group gained 199.2 | |||
grams. The animals ate as much of the diet as they wanted, and those in the sucrose group ate the least. The | |||
purpose of their study was to see whether fructose causes "glucose intolerance" and "insulin resistance." Since | |||
insulin stimulates appetite (Chance, et al, 1986; Dulloo and Girardier, 1989; Czech, 1988; DiBattista, 1983; | |||
Sonoda, 1983; Godbole and York, 1978), and fat synthesis, the reduced food consumption and reduced weight gain | |||
show that fructose was protecting against these potentially harmful effects of insulin. Much of the current | |||
concern about the dangers of fructose is focussed on the cornstarch-derived high fructose corn syrup, HFCS. Many | |||
studies assume that its composition is nearly all fructose and glucose. However, Wahjudi, et al. (2010) analyzed | |||
samples of it before and after hydrolyzing it in acid, to break down other carbohydrates present in it. They | |||
found that the carbohydrate content was several times higher than the listed values. "The underestimation of | |||
carbohydrate content in beverages may be a contributing factor in the development of obesity in children," and | |||
it's especially interesting that so much of it is present in the form of starch-like materials. Many people are | |||
claiming that fructose consumption has increased greatly in the last 30 or 40 years, and that this is | |||
responsible for the epidemic of obesity and diabetes. According to the USDA Economic Research Service, the 2007 | |||
calorie consumption as flour and cereal products increased 3% from 1970, while added sugar calories decreased | |||
1%. Calories from meats, eggs, and nuts decreased 4%, from dairy foods decreased 3%, and calories from added | |||
fats increased 7%. The percentage of calories from fruits and vegetables stayed the same. The average person | |||
consumed 603 calories per day more in 2007 than in 1970. If changes in the national diet are responsible for the | |||
increase of obesity, diabetes, and the diseases associated with them, then it would seem that the increased | |||
consumption of fat and starch is responsible, and that would be consistent with the known effects of starches | |||
and polyunsaturated fats. In monkeys living in the wild, when their diet is mainly fruit, their cortisol is low, | |||
and it rises when they eat a diet with less sugar (Behie, et al., 2010). Sucrose consumption lowers ACTH, the | |||
main pituitary stress hormone (Klement, et al., 2009; Ulrich-Lai, et al., 2007), and stress promotes increased | |||
sugar and fat consumption (Pecoraro, et al., 2004). If animals' adrenal glands are removed, so that they lack | |||
the adrenal steroids, they choose to consume more sucrose (Laugero, et al., 2001). Stress seems to be perceived | |||
as a need for sugar. In the absence of sucrose, satisfying this need with starch and fat is more likely to lead | |||
to obesity. The glucocorticoid hormones inhibit the metabolism of sugar. Sugar is essential for brain | |||
development and maintenance. The effects of environmental stimulation and deprivation-stress can be detected in | |||
the thickness of the brain cortex in as little as 4 days in growing rats (Diamond, et al., 1976). These effects | |||
can persist through a lifetime, and are even passed on transgenerationally. Experimental evidence shows that | |||
polyunsaturated (omega-3) fats retard fetal brain development, and that sugar promotes it. These facts argue | |||
against some of the currently popular ideas of the evolution of the human brain based on ancestral diets of fish | |||
or meat, which only matters as far as those anthropological theories are used to argue against fruits and other | |||
sugars in the present diet. Honey has been used therapeutically for thousands of years, and recently there has | |||
been some research documenting a variety of uses, including treatment of ulcers and colitis, and other | |||
inflammatory conditions. Obesity increases mediators of inflammation, including the C-reactive protein (CRP) and | |||
homocysteine. Honey, which contains free fructose and free glucose, lowers CRP and homocysteine, as well as | |||
triglycerides, glucose, and cholesterol, while it increased insulin more than sucrose did (Al-Waili, 2004). | |||
Hypoglycemia intensifies inflammatory reactions, and insulin can reduce inflammation if sugar is available. | |||
Obesity, like diabetes, seems to involve a cellular energy deficiency, resulting from the inability to | |||
metabolize sugar. Sucrose (and sometimes honey) is increasingly being used to reduce pain in newborns, for minor | |||
things such as injections (Guala, et al., 2001; Okan, et al., 2007; Anand, et al., 2005; Schoen and Fischell, | |||
1991). It's also effective in adults. It acts by influencing a variety of nerve systems, and also reduces | |||
stress. Insulin is probably involved in sugar analgesia, as it is in inflammation, since it promotes entry of | |||
endorphins into the brain (Witt, et al., 2000). An extracellular phosphorylated fructose metabolite, | |||
diphosphoglycerate, has an essential regulatory effect in the blood; another fructose metabolite, fructose | |||
diphosphate, can reduce mast cell histamine release and protect against oxidative and hypoxic injury and | |||
endotoxic shock, and it reduces the expression of the inflammation mediators TNF-alpha, IL-6, nitric oxide | |||
synthase, and the activation of NF-kappaB, among other protective effects, and its therapeutic value is known, | |||
but its relation to dietary sugars hasn't been investigated. A daily diet that includes two quarts of milk and a | |||
quart of orange juice provides enough fructose and other sugars for general resistance to stress, but larger | |||
amounts of fruit juice, honey, or other sugars can protect against increased stress, and can reverse some of the | |||
established degenerative conditions. Refined granulated sugar is extremely pure, but it lacks all of the | |||
essential nutrients, so it should be considered as a temporary therapeutic material, or as an occasional | |||
substitute when good fruit isn't available, or when available honey is allergenic. <h3> | |||
REFERENCES | |||
</h3>Anaesthesist 1995 Nov;44(11):770-81. [Fructose vs. glucose in total parenteral nutrition in critically ill | |||
patients] Adolph M, Eckart A, Eckart J. J Med Food. 2004 Spring;7(1):100-7. Natural honey lowers plasma glucose, | |||
C-reactive protein, homocysteine, and blood lipids in healthy, diabetic, and hyperlipidemic subjects: comparison | |||
with dextrose and sucrose. Al-Waili NS.Clin Ther. 2005 Jun;27(6):844-76. Analgesia and local anesthesia during | |||
invasive procedures in the neonate. Anand KJ, Johnston CC, Oberlander TF, Taddio A, Lehr VT, Walco GA.Ann Nutr | |||
Aliment. 1975;29(4):305-12. [Effects of administering diets with starch or sucrose basis on certain parameters | |||
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histology spectrum in experimental renal failure: adverse effects of phosphate and parathyroid hormone | |||
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AO, Custódio MR, Moysés RM, Jorgetti V. Am J Primatol. 2010 Jun;72(7):600-6. Sources of variation in fecal | |||
cortisol levels in howler monkeys in Belize. Behie AM, Pavelka MS, Chapman CA. Am J Hypertens. 2008 | |||
Jun;21(6):708-14. Hepatic effects of a fructose diet in the stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat. Brosnan | |||
MJ, Carkner RD.Am J Physiol. 1993 Apr;264(4 Pt 1):E504-13. Whole body and splanchnic oxygen consumption and | |||
blood flow after oral ingestion of fructose or glucose. Brundin T, Wahren J. "Compared with glucose, fructose | |||
ingestion is accompanied by a more marked rise in CO2 production, possibly reflecting an increased | |||
extrasplanchnic oxidation of lactate and an accumulation of heat in the body."Arkansas Academy of Science | |||
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cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Diamond MC, Ingham CA, Johnson RE, Bennett EL, Rosenzweig MR.Physiol Behav. | |||
1984 Jul;33(1):13-20. Food consumption, plasma glucose and stomach-emptying in insulin-injected hamsters. | |||
DiBattista D.Am J Physiol. 1989 Oct;257(4 Pt 2):R717-25. Energy expenditure and diet-induced thermogenesis in | |||
presence and absence of hyperphagia induced by insulin.Dulloo AG, Girardier L.J Lab Clin Med. 1980 | |||
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women. Gallagher JC, Riggs BL, Jerpbak CM, Arnaud CD.Diabetes Care. 2007 Jun;30(6):1406-11. Orange juice or | |||
fructose intake does not induce oxidative and inflammatory response. Ghanim H, Mohanty P, Pathak R, Chaudhuri A, | |||
Sia CL, Dandona P.Nutrition. 2005 Feb;21(2):240-8. Changes in lipid metabolism and antioxidant defense status in | |||
spontaneously hypertensive rats and Wistar rats fed a diet enriched with fructose and saturated fatty acids. | |||
Girard A, Madani S, El Boustani ES, Belleville J, Prost J. "The FS diet resulted in hypertriglyceridemia but | |||
increased the total antioxidant status, which may prevent lipid peroxidation in these rats."Diabetologia. 1978 | |||
Mar;14(3):191-7. Lipogenesis in situ in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat (fa/fa): role of hyperphagia and | |||
hyperinsulinaemia. Godbole V, York DA.Minerva Pediatr. 2001 Aug;53(4):271-4. Glucose or sucrose as an analgesic | |||
for newborns: a randomised controlled blind trial. Guala A, Pastore G, Liverani ME, Giroletti G, Gulino E, | |||
Meriggi AL, Licardi G, Garipoli V.Am J Clin Nutr. 1989 Jun;49(6):1290-4. Dietary fructose or starch: effects on | |||
copper, zinc, iron, manganese, calcium, and magnesium balances in humans.Holbrook JT, Smith JC Jr, Reiser | |||
S.Rinsho Byori 1998;46(10):1003-7. Involvement of tau protein kinase in amyloid-beta-induced neurodegeneration. | |||
Ishiguro K.J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2005; 90(2):1171-5. Polyol concentrations in the fluid compartments of the | |||
human conceptus during the first trimester of pregnancy: maintenance of redox potential in a low oxygen | |||
environment. Jauniaux E, Hempstock J, Teng C, Battaglia FC, Burton GJ.Br J Nutr. 2005 Apr;93(4):485-92. High | |||
rates of exogenous carbohydrate oxidation from a mixture of glucose and fructose ingested during prolonged | |||
cycling exercise. Jentjens RL, Jeukendrup AE. "Furthermore, exogenous CHO oxidation rates during the last 90 min | |||
of exercise were approximately 50% higher (P<0.05) in GLU+FRUC compared with GLU (1.49 (SE 0.08) and 0.99 (SE | |||
0.06) g/min, respectively)."Cancer Invest. 2000;18(7):664-9. A medical hypothesis: phosphorus balance and | |||
prostate cancer. Kapur S.J Lab Clin Med. 1967 Jan;69(1):110-5. Relationship between serum phosphate | |||
concentration and bone resorption in osteoporosis. Kelly PJ, Jowsey J, Riggs BL, Elveback LR.J Vet Sci. 2003 | |||
Aug;4(2):151-4. Studies on the effects of biomedicinal agents on serum concentration of Ca2+, P and ALP activity | |||
in osteoporosis-induced rats. Kim SK, Lee MH, Rhee MH.Metabolism. 2009 Dec;58(12):1825-31. Effects of glucose | |||
infusion on neuroendocrine and cognitive parameters in Addison disease. Klement J, Hubold C, Hallschmid M, Loeck | |||
C, Oltmanns KM, Lehnert H, Born J, Peters A.Endocrinology. 2001 Jul;142(7):2796-804. Sucrose ingestion | |||
normalizes central expression of corticotropin-releasing-factor messenger ribonucleic acid and energy balance in | |||
adrenalectomized rats: a glucocorticoid-metabolic-brain axis? Laugero KD, Bell ME, Bhatnagar S, Soriano L, | |||
Dallman MF.Chem Biol Interact. 2011 May 30;191(1-3):308-14. Metabolic mechanisms of methanol/formaldehyde in | |||
isolated rat hepatocytes: carbonyl-metabolizing enzymes versus oxidative stress. MacAllister SL, Choi J, Dedina | |||
L, O'Brien PJ.Mol Cell Biuochem 2010;341(1-2):149-57. Cytochrome c redox state influences the binding and | |||
release of cytochrome c in model membranes and in brain mitochondria. Macchioni L, Corazz I, Davidescu M, | |||
Francescangeli E, Roberti R, Corazzi L. Minerva Endocrinol 1990 Oct-Dec; 15(4):273-7. [Postprandial | |||
thermogenesis and obesity: effects of glucose and fructose]. Macor C, De Palo C, Vettor R, Sicolo N, De Palo E, | |||
Federspil G. J Am Coll Nutr. 2000 Feb;19(1):31-7. The interaction between dietary fructose and magnesium | |||
adversely affects macromineral homeostasis in men. Milne DB, Nielsen FH.J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2000 | |||
Dec;85(12):4515-9. Acute fructose administration decreases the glycemic response to an oral glucose tolerance | |||
test in normal adults. Moore MC, Cherrington AD, Mann SL, Davis SN. J Rheumatol. 2003 Apr;30(4):849-50. Acute | |||
gout precipitated by total parenteral nutrition. Moyer RA, John DS.Chem Biol Interact. 1995 Oct 20;98(1):27-44. | |||
Hepatocyte injury resulting from the inhibition of mitochondrial respiration at low oxygen concentrations | |||
involves reductive stress and oxygen activation. Niknahad H, Khan S, O'Brien PJ. "Furthermore, increasing the | |||
hepatocyte NADH/NAD+ ratio with NADH generating compounds such as ethanol, glycerol, or beta-hydroxybutyrate | |||
markedly increased cytotoxicity (prevented by desferoxamine) and further increased the intracellular release of | |||
non-heme iron. Cytotoxicity could be prevented by glycolytic substrates (eg. fructose, dihydroxyacetone, | |||
glyceraldehyde) or the NADH utilising substrates acetoacetate or acetaldehyde which decreased the reductive | |||
stress and prevented intracellular iron release."Eur J Pediatr. 2007 Oct;166(10):1017-24. Analgesia in preterm | |||
newborns: the comparative effects of sucrose and glucose. Okan F, Coban A, Ince Z, Yapici Z, Can G.Nigerian J. | |||
Biochem. Mol Biology 23(1): 12-14, 2008. Depleted blood fructose in diabetes. Osuagwu CG and Madumere | |||
HEO.Menopause. 2011 Sep 15. Improvement in immediate memory after 16 weeks of tualang honey (Agro Mas) | |||
supplement in healthy postmenopausal women.Othman Z, Shafin N, Zakaria R, Hussain NH, Mohammad WM.J Bone Joint | |||
Surg Br. 1965 Feb;47:137-9. CHANGES IN SERUM CALCIUM AND PHOSPHORUS DURING STILBOESTROL TREATMENT OF | |||
OSTEOPOROSIS. PARFITT AM.Endocrinology. 2004 Aug;145(8):3754-62. Chronic stress promotes palatable feeding, | |||
which reduces signs of stress: feedforward and feedback effects of chronic stress. Pecoraro N, Reyes F, Gomez F, | |||
Bhargava A, Dallman MF. Physiol Behav. 2009 Mar 23;96(4-5):651-61. An unexpected reduction in sucrose | |||
concentration activates the HPA axis on successive post shift days without attenuation by discriminative | |||
contextual stimuli. Pecoraro N, de Jong H, Dallman MF.Cardiovasc Res 2003;59(4):963-70. Reduction of endothelial | |||
NOS and bradykinin-induced extravastion of macromolecules in skeletal muscle of the fructose-fed rat model. | |||
Plante GE, Perreault M, Lanthier A, Marette A, Maheux P.Diabetes Metab. 2005 Apr;31(2):178-88. Consumption of | |||
carbohydrate solutions enhances energy intake without increased body weight and impaired insulin action in rat | |||
skeletal muscles. Ruzzin J, Lai YC, Jensen J. "Fructose and sucrose solutions enhanced energy intake but did not | |||
increase body weight."Clin Pediatr (Phila). 1991 Jul;30(7):429-32. Pain in neonatal circumcision. Schoen EJ, | |||
Fischell AA. J. Clin Invest. 1988; 81:1137-1145. Ethanol causes acute inhibition of carbohydrate, fat, and | |||
protein oxidation and insulin resistance, Shelmet JJ, Reichard GA, Skutches CL, Hoeldtke RD, Owen OE, and Boden | |||
G. J Appl Physiol. 1987 Aug;63(2):465-70. Regulatory alterations of daily energy expenditure induced by fasting | |||
or overfeeding in unrestrained rats. Shibata H, Bukowiecki LJ."O2 consumption decreased by 15% on the 1st day of | |||
fasting and then by an additional 15% on the 2nd day. On the 3rd day, when rats were fed again, energy intake | |||
increased by 30% above control (prefasting) values, whereas energy expenditure rapidly increased but no more | |||
than control values. On the other hand, when ad libitum fed animals were offered a sucrose solution (32%) for 2 | |||
days, energy intake increased by 30% and energy expenditure by 9-12%. On the 3rd day, when the rats were fed | |||
with their normal diet, energy intake significantly decreased under control (preoverfeeding) values during one | |||
day, but energy expenditure rapidly returned to normal values. The results show that fasting decreases, whereas | |||
hyperphagia increases 24-h energy expenditure during the treatments."Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2005 | |||
Jun;288(6):E1160-7. Inclusion of low amounts of fructose with an intraportal glucose load increases net hepatic | |||
glucose uptake in the presence of relative insulin deficiency in dog. Shiota M, Galassetti P, Igawa K, Neal DW, | |||
Cherrington AD. Physiol Behav. 1983 Mar;30(3):325-9. Hyperinsulinemia and its role in maintaining the | |||
hypothalamic hyperphagia in chickens. Sonoda T.Carbohydr Res. 2009 Sep 8;344(13):1676-81. Protective role of | |||
fructose in the metabolism of astroglial C6 cells exposed to hydrogen peroxide. Spasojević I, Bajić A, Jovanović | |||
K, Spasić M, Andjus P. Arthritis Res Ther 2008; 10(5);224. Vascular involvement in rheumatic diseases: 'vascular | |||
rheumatology.' Szekanecz Z, Koch AE.Am J Clin Nutr 1993 Nov;58(5 Suppl):766S-770S. Fructose and dietary | |||
thermogenesis. Tappy L, Jequier E. Biochem J 1967;102(1):177-80. The influence of fructose and its metabolites | |||
on ethanol metabolism in vitro. Thieden HI and Lundquist F. "without ethanol... fructose strongly increased the | |||
pyruvate concentrtion, which resulted in a decrease of the lactate/pyruvate concentration Am J Physiol Regul | |||
Integr Comp Physiol. 2000 Oct;279(4):R1334-40. Comparison of the effects of sucrose and fructose on insulin | |||
action and glucose tolerance.Thresher JS, Podolin DA, Wei Y, Mazzeo RS, Pagliassotti MJ. Bone. 2008 | |||
May;42(5):960-8. The effect of feeding different sugar-sweetened beverages to growing female Sprague-Dawley rats | |||
on bone mass and strength. Tsanzi E, Light HR, Tou JC. Microcirculation 2003;10(6);463-70. Blood-brain barrier | |||
permeability precedes senile plaque formation in an Alzheimer disease model. Ujiie M, Dickstein DL, Carlow DA, | |||
Jefferies WA.Physiol Behav. 2011 Apr 18;103(1):104-10. HPA axis dampening by limited sucrose intake: reward | |||
frequency vs. caloric consumption. Ulrich-Lai YM, Ostrander MM, Herman JP.Am J Physiol. 1986 Jun;250(6 Pt | |||
1):E607-14. Synergistic improvement of glucose tolerance by sucrose feeding and exercise training. Vallerand AL, | |||
Lupien J, Bukowiecki LJ. Diabete Metab. 1984 Sep;10(3):206-10. [Plasma glucose and C-peptide after ingestion of | |||
sucrose and starch in controlled insulin-dependent diabetics. Importance of glucose availability]. Villaume C, | |||
Rousselle D, Mejean L, Beck B, Drouin P, Debry G.Journal of the American Medical Association November 10, 2010; | |||
Carbohydrate Analysis of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) Containing Commercial Beverages. Wahjudi PN, Hsieh E, | |||
Mary E Patterson ME, Catherine S Mao CS, Lee WNP.Clin Sci (Lond). 2003 Jun 12. Uric acid reduces | |||
exercise-induced oxidative stress in healthy adults. Waring WS, Convery AA, Mishra V, Shenkin A, Webb DJ, | |||
Maxwell SR.J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2000 Dec;295(3):972-8. Insulin enhancement of opioid peptide transport across | |||
the blood-brain barrier and assessment of analgesic effect.Witt KA, Huber JD, Egleton RD, Davis TP. Life Sci. | |||
1983 Jul 4;33(1):75-82. Serum lipids and cholesterol distribution in lipoproteins of exercise-trained female | |||
rats fed sucrose. Deshaies Y, Vallerand AL, Bukowiecki LJ. Am J Physiol. 1983 Apr;244(4):R500-7. Effects of | |||
sucrose, caffeine, and cola beverages on obesity, cold resistance, and adipose tissue cellularity. Bukowiecki | |||
LJ, Lupien J, Folléa N, Jahjah L. Am J Physiol 1987 Sep;253(3 Pt 1):G390-6. Fructose prevents hypoxic cell death | |||
in liver. Anundi I, King J, Owen DA, Schneider H, Lemasters JJ, Thurman RG. <p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2012. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<strong><strong>The Cancer Matrix</strong> </strong> It isn't hard to understand that | |||
in heart failure the heart is undergoing changes in a unitary way, with all parts of the organ | |||
affected, and that parallel changes are happening in the rest of the body, interacting with and contributing | |||
to the changes in the heart, so that heart failure is now considered to be a systemic disease. (Most doctors | |||
see the systemic nature of heart disease, at least to the extent of warning their patients to lower | |||
cholesterol and avoid thyroid hormone.) But if someone tells a cancer patient or an oncologist that cancer | |||
is a systemic disease, the thought will be flatly rejected as untrue. They have been taught that cancer is a | |||
disease of bad, mutated, cells, which have to be completely eradicated, and that the patient's general | |||
health is a separate issue. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<span> The US government (NIH, CDC) provides a cancer curriculum to schools. For high school, | |||
grades 9-12, they explain that a series of gene mutations causes it. In grade school, the basic idea of | |||
the cancer curriculum is just to teach them to fear cancer and the sunlight which, according to the | |||
curriculum, seems to be a very important mutagen.</span> | |||
<span> The gene mutation theory of cancer is sustained by a broader mystique of "genetics" in | |||
our culture. Over 100 years ago, an ideology of chance and random changes in organisms was superimposed | |||
onto the theory of evolution. After 1944, when Avery, MacLeod and McCarty showed that strands of DNA | |||
carry hereditary information, the doctrine of random change took on a specific chemical meaning--changes | |||
in the sequence of bases in the DNA molecule. This made it easier to disregard the evidence of the | |||
inheritance of acquired changes, since chemical, even biochemical, reactions are usually interpreted | |||
statistically, with an assumption of randomness. If the changes in the DNA code are random, and not | |||
influenced by the organism's physiology and biochemistry, then the four nucleotides that make up DNA | |||
(abbreviated G, C, A, and T) should show a random composition, but in fact the ratio of GC pairs to AT | |||
pairs varies in different types of organism, and in mitochondrial DNA, the GC (guanine-cytosine) content | |||
corresponds closely to the rate of oxidative metabolism and longevity (Lehmann, et al., | |||
2008). </span> | |||
<span> The official (government and American Cancer Society) view of cancer is that a tumor | |||
consists of the descendants of a single mutated cell. A current "proof" of this is that in a given | |||
tumor, all of the X chromosomes which are active have the same genetic composition, while in the rest of | |||
the organism, the X chromosome which remains active is a matter of chance. That shows, they argue, that | |||
the tumor must have developed from a cell in which that chromosome was active, not from a group of | |||
cells. However, non-random inactivation of X chromosomes is now known to occur, and that it involves | |||
epigenetic imprinting processes, such as methylation (Falconer, et al., 1982; Heard, 2004). Mary Lyon, | |||
the person who discovered that females inactivate one of their X chromosomes, has recognized the | |||
complexity of the process (Lyon, 2004). In arguing against the idea that the development of cancer is an | |||
epigenetic process, the cancer-gene people have invoked a process that responds to epigenetic | |||
influences.</span> | |||
<span> The assumption of randomness, and the assertions of the cancer doctors who subscribe | |||
to the doctrine, have had terrible effects on biology and medicine. Following the doctrine, their | |||
treatments must concentrate on eliminating every single cell of the cancer clone. Since surgery can't | |||
eliminate defective cells that have entered the blood stream, radiation and chemical toxins are logical | |||
necessities. Since mutations are random events, the person's general health is of little importance to | |||
the oncologist. Typically, they will tell the patient that their diet doesn't matter, except that they | |||
should avoid antioxidants if they are going to have radiation therapy. </span> | |||
<span> For centuries, the definition of a malignant tumor has been that it's one which | |||
will return after it has been cut out. In recent years, the definition has been extended to those that | |||
return after the original tumor has been eliminated by radiation or chemotherapy. The idea of a "cancer | |||
stem cell," an especially tough type of cell from the mutated clone, has been invoked to explain the | |||
reason for the regrowth of a tumor in an area that was treated with intense radiation. However, it's now | |||
clear that normal cells are attracted to an irradiated area (Klopp, et al., 2007; Kidd, et al., 2009). | |||
The recognition of a "bystander effect," in which radiation (or other--Mothersill and Seymour, 2009) | |||
injury to one cell injures near-by cells by signals from the injured cell, has led to the recognition | |||
that ordinary stem cells or repair cells entering an area where a tumor has been destroyed will be | |||
modified by the residual damage of cells in the area. The ability to recruit normal cells into a damaged | |||
area, the "cancer field," the way normal organs do, shows that tumors can be thought of as organ-like | |||
structures, and that knowledge of the organizing principles of normal organs might improve our knowledge | |||
of tumors. The idea that cancer is primarily a problem of organization isn't new: Johannes Muller, in | |||
the 19th century, and J.W. Orr, and D.W. Smithers, in the 1940s and 1950s, and many others, have | |||
suggested that something outside of the individual cell could cause the | |||
disorganization. </span> | |||
<span> Once it is accepted that cancer is a systemic disease, and that a tumor, or the | |||
place in the body where a tumor has been removed, is something more than a collection of defective | |||
cells, very different therapeutic approaches can be considered. Looking at the events in a failing | |||
heart, we can see that the potential repair cells recruited by the stressed heart are diverted by the | |||
conditions that they encounter there, and either die or become connective tissue cells, secreting | |||
collagen, rather than becoming new muscle cells. </span> | |||
<span> Something that everyone knows about tumors is that they are harder than the normal | |||
tissues in which they appear--they can be identified as lumps. Like the failing heart, they become | |||
harder than normal, and like the failing heart, the hardening can proceed to calcification. There has | |||
been general recognition that inflammation has a role in both heart disease and cancer, but the fact | |||
that chronic inflammation leads to fibrosis, and that fibrosis often leads to calcification, is still | |||
usually considered not to be relevant to understanding and treating cancer. The tissue hardness that | |||
allows oncologists to diagnose cancer (Huang and Ingber, 2005) is ignored when choosing treatments, | |||
which isn't surprising, since treatments that destroy cancer cells increase the production of | |||
collagen.</span> | |||
<span> Aspirin is commonly recommended for preventing heart attacks, because it helps to | |||
prevent abnormal blood clots, but it has other effects that are beneficial in heart disease, for example | |||
reducing the generalized fibrosis of the heart that develops after a heart attack (Kalkman, et al., | |||
1995; Wu, et al., 2012). It also protects against fibrosis in other organs, by a variety of mechanisms, | |||
and this effect on the extracellular matrix seems to be one of ways in which it protects against cancer. | |||
DCA, dichloroacetate, the drug that has been in the news in recent years because it can stop cancer | |||
growth, by restoring the oxidation of glucose and stopping the aerobic production of lactic acid, has | |||
been found to reduce the fibrosis of a failing heart, by the same mechanism, restoring glucose | |||
oxidation. In general, substances that increase collagen production are promoters of cancer and | |||
contribute to the progression of heart failure, and other degenerative changes.</span> | |||
<span> The incidence of cancer increases exponentially with age, but when random mutations | |||
are seen as the cause of cancer, aging as an essential cause of cancer is disregarded. The total | |||
collagen content of the body increases with aging, and the stiffness of that collagen also increases. | |||
The total collagen content in cancer patients is higher than in people without cancer (Zimin, et al., | |||
2010). This suggests that the processes in the body that produce aging are acting more intensely in | |||
those who develop cancer. As the collagen accumulates in the extracellular matrix, the whole body | |||
becomes more favorable for the appearance of cancer. </span> | |||
<span> Plastic surgeons have promoted the idea of injecting collagen into tissues with the | |||
argument that they are "replacing collagen lost with aging," but in fact collagen accumulates with | |||
aging. It is the greater compactness and stiffness of collagen in old skin that produces noticeable | |||
changes such as wrinkling. The difference between calf skin leather, used for soft gloves and purses, | |||
and cow hide, used for shoe soles and boots, illustrates the changes that occur with aging. Supermarkets | |||
used to categorize chickens as fryers and stewers, or stewing hens. The difference was the age and | |||
toughness, very young chickens could be cooked quickly, old laying hens had accumulated more collagen, | |||
and especially the cross-linked hardened collagen, and required long cooking to reduce the toughness. | |||
Old beef animals are usually sold as cheaper stew meat or hamburger, because the age-hardened collagen | |||
can make a steak too rubbery to chew if it's quickly cooked. </span> | |||
<span> In a healthy young organism, tissue injuries are repaired by processes reminiscent | |||
of Metchnikov's experiment in which he put a thorn into a jelly fish, and found that wandering cells, | |||
phagocytes, converged on the foreign object, surrounding it. If they couldn't eat it, they caused it to | |||
be expelled. The importance of that experiment was that it showed that injured tissues emit signals that | |||
attract certain types of cell. The process of removing damaged tissues by phagocytosis guides the | |||
formation of new tissue, starting with the secretion of collagen, which guides the maturation of the new | |||
cells. </span> | |||
<span> Around the middle of the last century, Hans Selye experimented with the antiseptic | |||
implantation of a short piece of a narrow glass tube under the skin of rats. The irritation from the | |||
glass object caused a collagenous capsule to be formed around it, in the well known "foreign body | |||
reaction." He found that a filament of tissue formed in the center of the tube, connecting the two ends | |||
of the capsule. The isolated tissue of the filament quickly underwent the degenerative changes seen in | |||
aged connective tissues, but if he periodically removed the fluid around it, and allowed fresh lymph | |||
fluid to fill the capsule, the filament retained a youthful elasticity, even as the rat aged. Isolation | |||
from the organism caused age-like degeneration to develop rapidly. When the organism can't remove a | |||
foreign object, the collagenous capsule that encloses it has a high probability of forming a cancer. | |||
This "foreign body carcinogenesis" has been studied for many years. </span> | |||
<span> </span> | |||
<span> Foreign body carcinogenesis is closely related to chemical carcinogenesis, radiation | |||
carcinogenesis, and hormonal carcinogenesis. Chemical carcinogens such as methylcholanthrene are | |||
irritating when injected, and stimulate collagen production. Neither type of carcinogenesis is always | |||
effective, because this collagen reaction can be protective, by isolating the irritant toxin (Zhang, et | |||
al., 2013). Radiation stimulates the secretion of collagen, and causes cross-linking that makes it | |||
stiffer, and slows its removal, leading to its accumulation (Sassi, et al., 2001). Some types of | |||
cross-linking block the ability of macrophages to remove it, creating something like a diffuse foreign | |||
body reaction. Estrogen, for example in the process of causing breast cancer, causes increased collagen | |||
synthesis. This is widely recognized, in the association of "breast density" (a high collagen content) | |||
with the risk of cancer. Estrogen also causes the formation of the enzymes that cross-link and stiffen | |||
the collagen, lysyl oxidase and transglutaminase(Sanada, et al., 1978; Campisi, et al., 2008; | |||
Balestrieri, et al., 2012).</span> | |||
<span> Although ultraviolet and ionizing radiation can act directly on collagen, to stiffen | |||
it, the greatest effect of the radiation is probably by reaction with relatively unstable components of | |||
tissues, such as polyunsaturated fatty acids, which then react with the collagen, cross-linking it | |||
(Igarashi, et al., 1989). Even in the absence of radiation, a deficiency of vitamin E accelerates the | |||
spontaneous decomposition of the unsaturated fats, accelerating the aging of collagen (Sundholm and | |||
Visapää, 1978 ). Many observations suggest that all of the collagen-aging carcinogenic factors interact | |||
synergistically.</span> | |||
<span> When cells are placed on a glass slide coated with collagen, they move to parts of | |||
the collagen that have been cross-linked, and they move from slightly cross-linked collagen to stiffer, | |||
more thoroughly cross-linked areas (Vincent, et al., 2013). When they are on stiffer collagen, they pull | |||
themselves more tightly toward it, continuously expending energy in the process. The muscle-like | |||
contraction of the cell causes it to become more rigid (Huang and Ingber, 2005). The increased hardness | |||
of even small tumors makes it possible to identify lymph node metastases from a breast cancer by touch, | |||
without removing them (Miyaji, et al., 1997).</span> | |||
<span> The increased energy cost of this "isotonic contraction" of the cell filaments | |||
requires more energy to sustain, and will tend to create lactic acid, the way intense muscle contraction | |||
does, while consuming oxygen at a higher rate. The increased lactic acid and decreased oxygen | |||
availability stimulate the synthesis of more collagen, the growth of new blood vessels, expression of | |||
enzymes for increasing the stiffness of the collagen, and other processes associated with inflammation, | |||
aging, and cancer. Blocking even one of these processes, the lysyl oxidase cross-linking enzyme, can | |||
reduce the invasiveness of a cancer (Lee, et al., 2011). Some observations (Tan, et al., 2010) show that | |||
the circulating cells of metastatic cancer are more rigid than other cells, which would increase the | |||
likelihood that they will block capillaries, creating oxygen-deprived nests of collagen-secreting | |||
cells.</span> | |||
<span> One of the substances produced by stressed cells that's involved in tumor induction, | |||
growth, and metastasis (Tanaka, et al., 2003; Datta, et al., 2010; Was, et al., 2010) is the enzyme heme | |||
oxygenase, which breaks down the essential component of respiratory enzymes, heme, producing carbon | |||
monoxide as a product, which inhibits cell respiration, increasing reliance on the glycolysis which | |||
produces lactic acid. If metastatic cells continue to produce this enzyme, this is likely to contribute | |||
to reconstituting the "cancer field," with increased HIF, hypoxia inducible factor, and a variety of | |||
other regulatory agents, each of which has its protective functions elsewhere, but which in combination | |||
can worsen the tumor.</span> | |||
<span> Substances that inhibit inflammation are likely to also inhibit excessive collagen | |||
synthesis, serotonin secretion, and the formation of estrogen. Besides aspirin, some effective | |||
substances are apigenin and naringenin, found in oranges and guavas. These flavonoids also inhibit the | |||
formation of nitric oxide and prostaglandins, which are important for inflammation and carcinogenesis | |||
(Liang, et al., 1999). Increased CO2, which has a variety of anti-inflammatory effects, can decrease | |||
collagen formation and tissue collagen content significantly (Ryu, et al., 2010).</span> | |||
<span> Deprivation of glucose and oxygen, which can be the local result of a cellular | |||
environment of condensed, stiffened collagen and the cellular tension and activation produced in | |||
response, combined with systemic stress that causes free fatty acids to interfere with the oxidation of | |||
sugar, activates enzymes that can dissolve collagen (MMP-2 and MMP-9). These enzymes are involved in | |||
metastasis, allowing cells to escape from the condensed collagen, but although they are normally thought | |||
of as enzymes that act outside of cells, they can also enter the cell's nucleus, where they degrade the | |||
DNA, causing the mutations and chromosomal abnormalities that are so characteristic of cancer (Hill, et | |||
al., 2012). Like glucose deprivation, exposure to 2-deoxyglucose, often used in tumor imaging, promotes | |||
metastasis (Schlappack, et al., 1991).</span> | |||
<span> The fact that cancer cells are stressed and damaged, and accumulate DNA damage, | |||
means that in a typical tumor there is a high rate of cell death. The number of apoptotic | |||
(disintegrating) cells in a tumor corresponds to the aggressiveness of the tumor (Vakkala, et al, 1999). | |||
In the 1940s and 1950s, Polezhaev demonstrated that dying cells stimulate cell renewal, and this is true | |||
in young and healthy organs, as well as in tumors. </span> | |||
<span> In 36% of women who had had a breast removed, from 7 to 22 years previously, | |||
identifiable (by the same tests used to diagnose breast cancer) cancer cells could be found circulating | |||
in their blood stream (Meng, et al., 2004). Tissue biopsies would be able to find the sources of those | |||
circulating cells, nests of similar cells throughout the body, which were dying about as fast as they | |||
were replicating. In 1969, Harry Rubin described an autopsy study which found that everyone over the age | |||
of 50 had at least one diagnosable cancer in some tissue. "Occult microscopic cancers are exceedingly | |||
common in the general population and are held in a dormant state by a balance between cell proliferation | |||
and cell death and also an intact host immune surveillance"(Goldstein and Mascitelli, 2011). These | |||
authors observed that the stress of surgery stimulates tumor growth, by various mechanisms, and that | |||
surgery increases the risk of developing cancer in apparently cancer-free patients.</span> | |||
<span> In 1956, Hardin Jones wrote "If one has cancer and opts to do nothing at all, he | |||
will live longer and feel better than if he undergoes radiation, chemotherapy or surgery, other than | |||
when used in immediate life-threatening situations." In the 1990s, a group of cancer specialists were | |||
asked what they would do if they were diagnosed with prostate cancer, and most of them said they would | |||
do nothing. </span> | |||
<span> The radical mastectomy, which removed massive amounts of apparently normal tissue as | |||
well as the breast tumor, was practiced for hundreds of years, and was the standard treatment for breast | |||
cancer until the 1980s, after G.W. Crile, Jr., had publicized the evidence showing that simply removing | |||
the tumor lump itself didn't cause a higher mortality rate, and that the surgery produced much less | |||
disability. </span> | |||
<span> Although the lumpectomy was eventually accepted by the profession, the evidence that | |||
the long term survival rate was higher when the surgery was done during the luteal phase in | |||
premenopausal women has been generally ignored, because the cancer ideology maintains that the fate of | |||
the cancer is in the cells, rather than in the patient's hormone balance. </span> | |||
<span> Because of the continual indoctrination about the importance of "early diagnosis to | |||
increase the chance of a cure," and the widely publicized "cure rates," it's easy for doctors to rush | |||
people into treatment, before they have time to study the issue. Dean Burk, who was a collaborator of | |||
Otto Warburg's for many years, was quoted in regard to the claims of the American Cancer Society that | |||
"They lie like scoundrels."</span> | |||
<span> In the 1970s, I noticed that the definitions of the features of uterine cancer had | |||
been changed recently, including as "cancer" things that had previously been classified as merely | |||
abnormal or precancerous. Reading more about the grading of cancer, I saw that other cancers | |||
had been defined more inclusively since the 1940s. Things that had previously not been called cancer | |||
were now being counted among the cancers that were cured by the various treatments, so, necessarily, the | |||
rate of cure had increased. The true situation could be seen by the age-specific mortality rate for each | |||
type of cancer. During the period when the "cure rates" were increasing, the age-specific death rates | |||
had increased. I think that's the sort of thing that Dean Burk had in mind. </span> | |||
<span> Nearly all of the studies of "cure rates" are comparisons of one | |||
ideologically-based and lucrative treatment against another ideologically-based and more or less | |||
lucrative treatment. When the cure rate, for example for breast cancer surgery, varies with the amount | |||
of progesterone in the body, there is very little interest in investigating the processes involved, | |||
because lucrative products aren't involved.</span> | |||
<span> When abnormal "metastatic" cells circulate in the blood or lymph, most of them die | |||
spontaneously when they stick in a place that doesn't support their growth. Many of the nests of cells | |||
that have started to grow probably regress spontaneously when conditions in the body change. Even large, | |||
clearly diagnosed tumors occasionally regress spontaneously. Aging and sickness tend to support the | |||
vicious cycles that lead to the progressive deterioration of the collagenous matrix. Stress (even | |||
anxiety-induced hyperventilation) produces alkalosis, and alkalosis favors increased collagen synthesis, | |||
while lower pH inhibits it (Frick, et al., 1997). For example, within a minute or two of | |||
hyperventilating, platelets release serotonin, and serotonin is a major promoter of collagen synthesis | |||
and fibrosis. </span> | |||
<span> The vicious cycles that promote cancer can be interrupted to some extent simply by | |||
reducing exposure to things that promote stress and inflammation--endotoxin, polyunsaturated fats, amino | |||
acid imbalance, nutritional deficiencies, ionizing radiation, estrogens--and maintaining optimal levels | |||
of things that protect against those--carbon dioxide, vitamin E, progesterone, light, aspirin, sugars, | |||
and thyroid hormone, for example.</span> | |||
<span> </span> | |||
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mouse pups. Ryu J, Heldt GP, Nguyen M, Gavrialov O, Haddad GG.</span> | |||
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<span>Radiother Oncol. 2001 Mar;58(3):317-23. Type I collagen turnover and cross-linking are increased | |||
in irradiated skin of breast cancer patients. Sassi M, Jukkola A, Riekki R, Höyhtyä M, Risteli L, | |||
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Zimmermann A, Hill RP.</span> | |||
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Sundholm F, Visapää A.</span> | |||
<span>Biosens Bioelectron. 2010 Dec 15;26(4):1701-5. Versatile label free biochip for the detection of | |||
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<span>Br J Cancer. 2003 Mar 24;88(6):902-9. Antiapoptotic effect of haem oxygenase-1 induced by nitric | |||
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Miyamoto Y, Maeda H.</span> | |||
<span>Vakkala M., Lähteenmäki K., Raunio H., Pääkkö P., Soini Y. Apoptosis during breast carcinoma | |||
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<span>Biotechnol J. 2013 Apr;8(4):472-84. Mesenchymal stem cell durotaxis depends on substrate | |||
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<span>Curr Drug Targets. 2010 Dec;11(12):1551-70. Heme oxygenase-1 in tumor biology and therapy. Was H, | |||
Dulak J, Jozkowicz A. </span> | |||
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Champlain J, Girouard H.</span> | |||
<span>Cancer Res. 2013 May 1;73(9):2770-81. Fibroblast-</span> | |||
<span>Specific Protein 1/S100A4-Positive Cells Prevent Carcinoma through Collagen Production and | |||
Encapsulation of Carcinogens. Zhang J, Chen L, Liu X, Kammertoens T, Blankenstein T, Qin Z.</span> | |||
<span>Bull Exp Biol Med. 2010 Oct;149(5):663-5. Impact of the content of collagens I and III and their | |||
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DA, Ponomareva EE.</span> | |||
</p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2015. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Progesterone Pregnenolone & DHEA - Three Youth-Associated Hormones</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Progesterone Pregnenolone & DHEA - Three Youth-Associated Hormones | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>PROGESTERONE INFORMATION</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Raymond Peat, MA, PhD (Univ. of Oregon) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrine Physiologist, specializing in hormonal changes in stress and aging | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sixty years ago, progesterone was found to be the main hormone produced by the ovaries. Since it was | |||
necessary for fertility and for maintaining a healthy pregnancy, it was called the "pro-gestational | |||
hormone," and its name sometimes leads people to think that it isn't needed when you don't want to get | |||
pregnant. In fact, it is the most protective hormone the body produces, and the large amounts that are | |||
produced during pregnancy result from the developing baby's need for protection from the stressful | |||
environment. Normally, the brain contains a very high concentration of progesterone, reflecting its | |||
protective function for that most important organ. The thymus gland, the key organ of our immune system, is | |||
also profoundly dependent on progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In experiments, progesterone was found to be the basic hormone of adaptation and of resistance to stress. | |||
The adrenal glands use it to produce their anti-stress hormones, and when there is enough progesterone, they | |||
don't have to produce the potentially harmful cortisone. In a progesterone deficiency, we produce too much | |||
cortisone, and excessive cortisone causes osteoporosis, aging of the skin, damage to brain cells, and the | |||
accumulation of fat, especially on the back and abdomen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Experiments have shown that progesterone relieves anxiety, improves memory, protects brain cells, and even | |||
prevents epileptic seizures. It promotes respiration, and has been used to correct emphysema. In the | |||
circulatory system, it prevents bulging veins by increasing the tone of blood vessels, and improves the | |||
efficiency of the heart. It reverses many of the signs of aging in the skin, and promotes healthy bone | |||
growth. It can relieve many types of arthritis, and helps a variety of immunological problems. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If progesterone is taken dissolved in vitamin E, it is absorbed very efficiently, and distributed quickly to | |||
all of the tissues. If a woman has ovaries, progesterone helps them to produce both progesterone and | |||
estrogen as needed, and also helps to restore normal functioning of the thyroid and other glands. If her | |||
ovaries have been removed, progesterone should be taken consistently to replace the lost supply. A | |||
progesterone deficiency has often been associated with increased susceptibility to cancer, and progesterone | |||
has been used to treat some types of cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It is important to emphasize that progesterone is not just the hormone of pregnancy. To use it only "to | |||
protect the uterus" would be like telling a man he doesn't need testosterone if he doesn't plan to father | |||
children, except that progesterone is of far greater and more basic significance than testosterone. While | |||
men do naturally produce progesterone, and can sometimes benefit from using it, it is not a male hormone. | |||
Some people get that impression, because some physicians recommend combining estrogen with either | |||
testosterone or progesterone, to protect against some of estrogen's side effects, but progesterone is the | |||
body's natural complement to estrogen. Used alone, progesterone often makes it unnecessary to use estrogen | |||
for hot flashes or insomnia, or other symptoms of menopause. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When dissolved in vitamin E, progesterone begins entering the blood stream almost as soon as it contacts any | |||
membrane, such as the lips, tongue, gums, or palate, but when it is swallowed, it continues to be absorbed | |||
as part of the digestive process. When taken with food, its absorption occurs at the same rate as the | |||
digestion and absorption of the food. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>PREGNENOLONE</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pregnenolone, which is the raw material for producing many of the hormones of stress and adaptation, was | |||
known as early as 1934, but for several years it was considered to be an "inert" substance. A reason for | |||
this belief is that it was first tested on healthy young animals. Since these animals were already producing | |||
large amounts of pregnenolone (in the brain, adrenal glands, and gonads), additional pregnenolone had no | |||
effect. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1940s, pregnenolone was tested in people who were sick or under stress, and it was found to have a | |||
wide range of beneficial actions, but the drug industry never had much interest in it. Its very generality | |||
made it seem unlike a drug, and its natural occurrence made it impossible to patent. Thus, many synthetic | |||
variants, each with a more specialized action and some serious side effects, came to be patented and | |||
promoted for use in treating specific conditions. The drug companies created an atmosphere in which many | |||
people felt that each disease should have a drug, and each drug, a disease. The side effects of some of | |||
those synthetic hormones were so awful that many people came to fear them. For example, synthetic varieties | |||
of "cortisone" can destroy immunity, and can cause osteoporosis, diabetes, and rapid aging, with loss of | |||
pigment in the skin and hair, and extreme thinning of the skin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Natural pregnenolone is present in young people of both sexes at a very high concentration, and one reason | |||
for the large amount produced in youth is that it is one of our basic defenses against the harmful side | |||
effects that an imbalance of even our natural hormones can produce. In excess, natural cortisone or estrogen | |||
can be dangerous, but when there is an abundance of pregnenolone, their side effects are prevented or | |||
minimized. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In a healthy young person or animal, taking even a large dose of pregnenolone has no hormone-like or | |||
drug-like action at all. It is unique in this way. But if the animal or person is under stress, and | |||
producing more cortisone than usual, taking pregnenolone causes the cortisone to come down to the normal | |||
level. After the age of 40 or 45, it seems that everyone lives in a state of continuous "stress," just as a | |||
normal part of aging. This coincides with the body's decreased ability to produce an abundance of | |||
pregnenolone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When aging rats are given a supplement of pregnenolone, it immediately improves their memory and general | |||
performance. Human studies, as early as the 1940s, have also demonstrated improved performance of ordinary | |||
tasks. It is now known that pregnenolone is one of the major hormones in the brain. It is produced by | |||
certain brain cells, as well as being absorbed into the brain from the blood. It protects brain cells from | |||
injury caused by fatigue, and an adequate amount has a calming effect on the emotions, which is part of the | |||
reason that it protects us from the stress response that leads to an excessive production of cortisone. | |||
People feel a mood of resilience and an ability to confront challenges. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many people have noticed that pregnenolone has a "face-lifting" action. This effect seems to be produced by | |||
improved circulation to the skin, and by an actual contraction of some muscle-like cells in the skin. A | |||
similar effect can improve joint mobility in arthritis, tissue elasticity in the lungs, and even eyesight. | |||
Many studies have shown it to be protective of "fibrous tissues" in general, and in this connection it was | |||
proven to prevent the tumors that can be caused by estrogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pregnenolone is largely converted into two other "youth-associated" protective hormones, progesterone and | |||
DHEA. At the age of 30, both men and women produce roughly 30 to 50 mg. of pregnenolone daily. When taken | |||
orally, even in the powdered form, it is absorbed fairly well. One dose of approximately 300 mg (the size of | |||
an aspirin tablet) keeps acting for about a week, as absorption continues along the intestine, and as it is | |||
"recycled" in the body. Part of this long lasting effect is because it improves the body's ability to | |||
produce its own pregnenolone. It tends to improve function of the thyroid and other glands, and this | |||
"normalizing" effect on the other glands helps to account for its wide range of beneficial effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong>DHEA: ANOTHER YOUTH-ASSOCIATED HORMONE</strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Raymond Peat, MA, PhD (Univ. of Oregon) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrine Physiologist | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) has a technical-sounding name because it has never been identified with a | |||
single dominant function, in spite of its abundance in the body. Many researchers still think of it as a | |||
substance produced by the adrenal glands, but experiments show that animals without adrenals are able to | |||
produce it in normal amounts. Much of it is formed in the brain (from pregnenolone), but it is probably | |||
produced in other organs, including the skin. The brain contains a much higher concentration of DHEA than | |||
the blood does. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In old age, we produce only about 5% as much as we do in youth. This is about the same decrease that occurs | |||
with progesterone and pregnenolone. The other hormones (for example, cortisone) do not decrease so much; as | |||
a result, our balance shifts continually during aging toward dominance by hormones such as cortisone, which | |||
use up more and more body substance, without rebuilding it. Protection against the toxic actions of these | |||
specialized hormones is a major function of DHEA and the other youth-associated hormones. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For example, starvation, aging, and stress cause the skin to become thin and fragile. An excess of | |||
cortisone--whether it is from medical treatment, or from stress, aging, or malnutrition--does the same | |||
thing. Material from the skin is dissolved to provide nutrition for the more essential organs. Other organs, | |||
such as the muscles and bones, dissolve more slowly, but just as destructively, under the continued | |||
influence of cortisone. DHEA blocks these destructive effects of cortisone, and actively restores the normal | |||
growth and repair processes to those organs, strengthening the skin and bones and other organs. Stimulation | |||
of bone-growth by DHEA has been demonstrated in vitro (in laboratory tests), and it has been used to relieve | |||
many symptoms caused by osteoporosis and arthritis, even when applied topically in an oily solution. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen is known to produce a great variety of immunological defects, and DHEA, apparently by its balancing | |||
and restorative actions, is able to correct some of those immunological defects, including some "autoimmune" | |||
diseases. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It is established that DHEA protects against cancer, but it isn't yet understood how it does this. It | |||
appears to protect against the toxic cancer-producing effects of excess estrogen, but its anti-cancer | |||
properties probably involve many other functions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Diabetes can be produced experimentally by certain poisons which kill the insulin-producing cells in the | |||
pancreas. Rabbits were experimentally made diabetic, and when treated with DHEA their diabetes was cured. It | |||
was found that the insulin-producing cells had regenerated. Many people with diabetes have used brewer's | |||
yeast and DHEA to improve their sugar metabolism. In diabetes, very little sugar enters the cells, so | |||
fatigue is a problem. DHEA stimulates cells to absorb sugar and to burn it, so it increases our general | |||
energy level and helps to prevent obesity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Young people produce about 12 to 15 milligrams of DHEA per day, and that amount decreases by about 2 mg. per | |||
day for every decade after the age of 30. This is one of the reasons that young people eat more without | |||
getting fat, and tolerate cold weather better: DHEA, like the thyroid hormone, increases our heat production | |||
and ability to burn calories. At the age of 50, about 4 mg. of DHEA per day will usually restore the level | |||
of DHEA in the blood to a youthful level. It is important to avoid taking more than needed, since some | |||
people (especially if they are deficient in progesterone, pregnenolone, or thyroid) can turn the excess into | |||
estrogen or testosterone, and large amounts of those sex hormones can disturb the function of the thymus | |||
gland and the liver. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
People who have taken an excess of DHEA have been found to have abnormally high estrogen levels, and this | |||
can cause the liver to enlarge, and the thymus to shrink. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One study has found that the only hormone abnormality in a groupt of Alzheimers patients' brains was an | |||
excess of DHEA. In cell culture, DHEA can cause changes in glial cells resembling those seen in the aging | |||
brain. These observations suggest that DHEA should be used with caution. Supplements of pregnenolone and | |||
thyroid seem to be the safest way to optimize DHEA production. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<head><title>Thyroid: Therapies, Confusion, and Fraud</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Thyroid: Therapies, Confusion, and Fraud | |||
</h1> | |||
I. Respiratory-metabolic defect II. 50 years of commercially motivated fraud III. Tests and the "free hormone | |||
hypothesis" IV. Events in the tissues V. Therapies VI. Diagnosis | |||
<strong>I. Respiratory defect</strong> | |||
Broda Barnes, more than 60 years ago, summed up the major effects of hypothyroidism on health very neatly when | |||
he pointed out that if hypothyroid people don't die young from infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis, they | |||
die a little later from cancer or heart disease. He did his PhD research at the University of Chicago, just a | |||
few years after Otto Warburg, in Germany, had demonstrated the role of a "respiratory defect" in cancer. At the | |||
time Barnes was doing his research, hypothyroidism was diagnosed on the basis of a low basal metabolic rate, | |||
meaning that only a small amount of oxygen was needed to sustain life. This deficiency of oxygen consumption | |||
involved the same enzyme system that Warburg was studying in cancer cells. Barnes experimented on rabbits, and | |||
found that when their thyroid glands were removed, they developed atherosclerosis, just as hypothyroid people | |||
did. By the mid-1930s, it was generally known that hypothyroidism causes the cholesterol level in the blood to | |||
increase; hypercholesterolemia was a diagnostic sign of hypothyroidism. Administering a thyroid supplement, | |||
blood cholesterol came down to normal exactly as the basal metabolic rate came up to the normal rate. The | |||
biology of atherosclerotic heart disease was basically solved before the second world war. Many other diseases | |||
are now known to be caused by respiratory defects. Inflammation, stress, immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, | |||
developmental and degenerative diseases, and aging, all involve significantly abnormal oxidative processes. Just | |||
brief oxygen deprivation triggers processes that lead to lipid peroxidation, producing a chain of other | |||
oxidative reactions when oxygen is restored. The only effective way to stop lipid peroxidation is to restore | |||
normal respiration. Now that dozens of diseases are known to involve defective respiration, the idea of | |||
thyroid's extremely broad range of actions is becoming easier to accept. | |||
<strong>II. 50 years of fraud</strong> | |||
Until the second world war, hypothyroidism was diagnosed on the basis of BMR (basal metabolic rate) and a large | |||
group of signs and symptoms. In the late 1940s, promotion of the (biologically inappropriate) PBI (protein-bound | |||
iodine) blood test in the U.S. led to the concept that only 5% of the population were hypothyroid, and that the | |||
40% identified by "obsolete" methods were either normal, or suffered from other problems such as sloth and | |||
gluttony, or "genetic susceptibility" to disease. During the same period, thyroxine became available, and in | |||
healthy young men it acted "like the thyroid hormone." Older practitioners recognized that it was not | |||
metabolically the same as the traditional thyroid substance, especially for women and seriously hypothyroid | |||
patients, but marketing, and its influence on medical education, led to the false idea that the standard Armour | |||
thyroid USP wasn't properly standardized, and that certain thyroxine products were; despite the fact that both | |||
of these were shown to be false. By the 1960s, the PBI test was proven to be irrelevant to the diagnosis of | |||
hypothyroidism, but the doctrine of 5% hypothyroidism in the populaton became the basis for establishing the | |||
norms for biologically meaningful tests when they were introduced. Meanwhile, the practice of measuring serum | |||
iodine, and equating it with "thyroxine the thyroid hormone," led to the practice of examining only the iodine | |||
content of the putative glandular material that was offered for sale as thyroid USP. This led to the | |||
substitution of materials such as iodinated casein for desiccated thyroid in the products sold as thyroid USP. | |||
The US FDA refused to take action, because they held that a material's iodine content was enough to identify it | |||
as "thyroid USP." In this culture of misunderstanding and misrepresentation, the mistaken idea of | |||
hypothyroidism's low incidence in the population led to the acceptance of dangerously high TSH (thyroid | |||
stimulating hormone) activity as "normal." Just as excessive FSH (follicle stimulating hormone) has been shown | |||
to have a role in ovarian cancer, excessive stimulation by TSH produces disorganization in the thyroid gland. | |||
<strong>III. Tests & the "free hormone hypothesis"</strong> | |||
After radioactive iodine became available, many physicians would administer a dose, and then scan the body with | |||
a Geiger counter, to see if it was being concentrated in the thyroid gland. If a person had been eating | |||
iodine-rich food (and iodine was used in bread as a preservative/dough condition, and was present in other foods | |||
as an accidental contaminant), they would already be over saturated with iodine, and the gland would fail to | |||
concentrate the iodine. The test can find some types of metastatic thyroid cancer, but the test generally wasn't | |||
used for that purpose. Another expensive and entertaining test has been the thyrotropin release hormone (TRH) | |||
test, to see if the pituitary responds to it by increasing TSH production. A recent study concluded that "TRH | |||
test gives many misleading results and has an elevated cost/benefit ratio as compared with the characteristic | |||
combination of low thyroxinemia and non-elevated TSH." (Bakiri, Ann. Endocr (Paris) 1999), but the technological | |||
drama, cost, and danger (Dokmetas, et al., J Endocrinol Invest 1999 Oct; 22(9): 698-700) of this test is going | |||
to make it stay popular for a long time. If the special value of the test is to diagnose a pituitary | |||
abnormality, it seems intuitively obvious that overstimulating the pituitary might not be a good idea (e.g., it | |||
could cause a tumor to grow). Everything else being equal, as they say, looking at the amount of thyroxine and | |||
TSH in the blood can be informative. The problem is that it's just a matter of faith that "everything else" is | |||
going to be equal. The exceptions to the "rule" regarding normal ranges for thyroxine and TSH have formed the | |||
basis for some theories about "the genetics of thyroid resistance," but others have pointed out that, when a few | |||
other things are taken into account, abnormal numbers for T4, T3, TSH, can be variously explained. The actual | |||
quantity of T3, the active thyroid hormone, in the blood can be measured with reasonable accuracy (using | |||
radioimmunoassay, RIA), and this single test corresponds better to the metabolic rate and other meaningful | |||
biological responses than other standard tests do. But still, this is only a statistical correspondence, and it | |||
doesn't indicate that any particular number is right for a particular individual. Sometimes, a test called the | |||
RT3U, or resin T3 uptake, is used, along with a measurement of thyroxine. A certain amount of radioactive T3 is | |||
added to a sample of serum, and then an adsorbent material is exposed to the mixture of serum and radioactive | |||
T3. The amount of radioactivity that sticks to the resin is called the T3 uptake. The lab report then gives a | |||
number called T7, or free thyroxine index. The closer this procedure is examined, the sillier it looks, and it | |||
looks pretty silly on its face.. The idea that the added radioactive T3 that sticks to a piece of resin will | |||
correspond to "free thyroxine," is in itself odd, but the really interesting question is, what do they mean by | |||
"free thyroxine"? Thyroxine is a fairly hydrophobic (insoluble in water) substance, that will associate with | |||
proteins, cells, and lipoproteins in the blood, rather than dissolving in the water. Although the Merck Index | |||
describes it as "insoluble in water," it does contain some polar groups that, in the right (industrial or | |||
laboratory) conditions, can make it slightly water soluble. This makes it a little different from progesterone, | |||
which is simply and thoroughly insoluble in water, though the term "free hormone" is often applied to | |||
progesterone, as it is to thyroid. In the case of progesterone, the term "free progesterone" can be traced to | |||
experiments in which serum containing progesterone (bound to proteins) is separated by a (dialysis) membrane | |||
from a solution of similar proteins which contain no progesterone. Progesterone "dissolves in" the substance of | |||
the membrane, and the serum proteins, which also tend to associate with the membrane, are so large that they | |||
don't pass through it. On the other side, proteins coming in contact with the membrane pick up some | |||
progesterone. The progesterone that passes through is called "free progesterone," but from that experiment, | |||
which gives no information on the nature of the interactions between progesterone and the dialysis membrane, or | |||
about its interactions with the proteins, or the proteins' interactions with the membrane, nothing is revealed | |||
about the reasons for the transmission or exchange of a certain amount of progesterone. Nevertheless, that type | |||
of experiment is used to interpret what happens in the body, where there is nothing that corresponds to the | |||
experimental set-up, except that some progesterone is associated with some protein. The idea that the "free | |||
hormone" is the active form has been tested in a few situations, and in the case of the thyroid hormone, it is | |||
clearly not true for the brain, and some other organs. The protein-bound hormone is, in these cases, the active | |||
form; the associations between the "free hormone" and the biological processes and diseases will be completely | |||
false, if they are ignoring the active forms of the hormone in favor of the less active forms. The conclusions | |||
will be false, as they are when T4 is measured, and T3 ignored. Thyroid-dependent processes will appear to be | |||
independent of the level of thyroid hormone; hypothyroidism could be caller hyperthyroidism. Although | |||
progesterone is more fat soluble than cortisol and the thyroid hormones, the behavior of progesterone in the | |||
blood illustrates some of the problems that have to be considered for interpreting thyroid physiology. When red | |||
cells are broken up, they are found to contain progesterone at about twice the concentration of the serum. In | |||
the serum, 40 to 80% of the progesterone is probably carried on albumin. (Albumin easily delivers its | |||
progesterone load into tissues.) Progesterone, like cholesterol, can be carried on/in the lipoproteins, in | |||
moderate quantities. This leaves a very small fraction to be bound to the "steroid binding globulin." Anyone who | |||
has tried to dissolve progesterone in various solvents and mixtures knows that it takes just a tiny amount of | |||
water in a solvent to make progesterone precipitate from solution as crystals; its solubility in water is | |||
essentially zero. "Free" progesterone would seem to mean progesterone not attached to proteins or dissolved in | |||
red blood cells or lipoproteins, and this would be zero. The tests that purport to measure free progesterone are | |||
measuring something, but not the progesterone in the watery fraction of the serum. The thyroid hormones | |||
associate with three types of simple proteins in the serum: Transthyretin (prealbumin), thyroid binding | |||
globulin, and albumin. A very significant amount is also associated with various serum lipoproteins, including | |||
HDL, LDL, and VLDL (very low density lipoproteins). A very large portion of the thyroid in the blood is | |||
associated with the red blood cells. When red cells were incubated in a medium containing serum albumin, with | |||
the cells at roughly the concentration found in the blood, they retained T3 at a concentration 13.5 times higher | |||
than that of the medium. In a larger amount of medium, their concentration of T3 was 50 times higher than the | |||
medium's. When laboratories measure the hormones in the serum only, they have already thrown out about 95% of | |||
the thyroid hormone that the blood contained. The T3 was found to be strongly associated with the cells' | |||
cytoplasmic proteins, but to move rapidly between the proteins inside the cells and other proteins outside the | |||
cells. When people speak of hormones travelling "on" the red blood cells, rather than "in" them, it is a | |||
concession to the doctrine of the impenetrable membrane barrier. Much more T3 bound to albumin is taken up by | |||
the liver than the small amount identified in vitro as free T3 (Terasaki, et al., 1987). The specific binding of | |||
T3 to albumin alters the protein's electrical properties, changing the way the albumin interacts with cells and | |||
other proteins. (Albumin becomes electrically more positive when it binds the hormone; this would make the | |||
albumin enter cells more easily. Giving up its T3 to the cell, it would become more negative, making it tend to | |||
leave the cell.) This active role of albumin in helping cells take up T3 might account for its increased uptake | |||
by the red cells when there were fewer cells in proportion to the albumin medium. This could also account for | |||
the favorable prognosis associated with higher levels of serum albumin in various sicknesses. When T3 is | |||
attached chemically (covalently, permanently) to the outside of red blood cells, apparently preventing its entry | |||
into other cells, the presence of these red cells produces reactions in other cells that are the same as some of | |||
those produced by the supposedly "free hormone." If T3 attached to whole cells can exert its hormonal action, | |||
why should we think of the hormone bound to proteins as being unable to affect cells? The idea of measuring the | |||
"free hormone" is that it supposedly represents the biologically active hormone, but in fact it is easier to | |||
measure the biological effects than it is to measure this hypothetical entity. Who cares how many angels might | |||
be dancing on the head of a pin, if the pin is effective in keeping your shirt closed? | |||
<strong>IV. Events in the tissues</strong> | |||
Besides the effects of commercial deception, confusion about thyroid has resulted from some biological clich"s. | |||
The idea of a "barrier membrane" around cells is an assumption that has affected most people studying cell | |||
physiology, and its effects can be seen in nearly all of the thousands of publications on the functions of | |||
thyroid hormones. According to this idea, people have described a cell as resembling a droplet of a watery | |||
solution, enclosed in an oily bag which separates the internal solution from the external watery solution. The | |||
clich" is sustained only by neglecting the fact that proteins have a great affinity for fats, and fats for | |||
proteins; even soluble proteins, such as serum albumin, often have interiors that are extremely fat-loving. | |||
Since the structural proteins that make up the framework of a cell aren't "dissolved in water" (they used to be | |||
called "the insoluble proteins"), the lipophilic phase isn't limited to an ultramicroscopically thin surface, | |||
but actually constitutes the bulk of the cell. Molecular geneticists like to trace their science from a 1944 | |||
experiment that was done by Avery., et al. Avery's group knew about an earlier experiment, that had demonstrated | |||
that when dead bacteria were added to living bacteria, the traits of the dead bacteria appeared in the living | |||
bacteria. Avery's group extracted DNA from the dead bacteria, and showed that adding it to living bacteria | |||
transferred the traits of the dead organisms to the living. In the 1930s and 1940s, the movement of huge | |||
molecules such as proteins and nucleic acids into cells and out of cells wasn't a big deal; people observed it | |||
happening, and wrote about it. But in the 1940s the idea of the barrier membrane began gaining strength, and by | |||
the 1960s nothing was able to get into cells without authorization. At present, I doubt that any molecular | |||
geneticist would dream of doing a gene transplant without a "vector" to carry it across the membrane barrier. | |||
Since big molecules are supposed to be excluded from cells, it's only the "free hormone" which can find its | |||
specific port of entry into the cell, where another clich" says it must travel into the nucleus, to react with a | |||
specific site to activate the specific genes through which its effects will be expressed. I don't know of any | |||
hormone that acts that way. Thyroid, progesterone, and estrogen have many immediate effects that change the | |||
cell's functions long before genes could be activated. Transthyretin, carrying the thyroid hormone, enters the | |||
cell's mitochondria and nucleus (Azimova, et al., 1984, 1985). In the nucleus, it immediately causes generalized | |||
changes in the structure of chromosomes, as if preparing the cell for major adaptive changes. Respiratory | |||
activation is immediate in the mitochondria, but as respiration is stimulated, everything in the cell responds, | |||
including the genes that support respiratory metabolism. When the membrane people have to talk about the entry | |||
of large molecules into cells, they use terms such as "endocytosis" and "translocases," that incorporate the | |||
assumption of the barrier. But people who actually investigate the problem generally find that "diffusion," | |||
"codiffusion," and absorption describe the situation adequately (e.g., B.A. Luxon, 1997; McLeese and Eales, | |||
1996). "Active transport" and "membrane pumps" are ideas that seem necessary to people who haven't studied the | |||
complex forces that operate at phase boundaries, such as the boundary between a cell and its environment. | |||
<strong>V. Therapy</strong> | |||
Years ago it was reported that Armour thyroid, U.S.P., released T3 and T4, when digested, in a ratio of 1:3, and | |||
that people who used it had much higher ratios of T3 to T4 in their serum, than people who took only thyroxine. | |||
The argument was made that thyroxine was superior to thyroid U.S.P., without explaining the significance of the | |||
fact that healthy people who weren't taking any thyroid supplement had higher T3:T4 ratios than the people who | |||
took thyroxine, or that our own thyroid gland releases a high ratio of T3 to T4. The fact that the T3 is being | |||
used faster than T4, removing it from the blood more quickly than it enters from the thyroid gland itself, | |||
hasn't been discussed in the journals, possibly because it would support the view that a natural glandular | |||
balance was more appropriate to supplement than pure thyroxine. The serum's high ratio of T4 to T3 is a | |||
pitifully poor argument to justify the use of thyroxine instead of a product that resembles the proportion of | |||
these substances secreted by a healthy thyroid gland, or maintained inside cells. About 30 years ago, when many | |||
people still thought of thyroxine as "the thryoid hormone," someone was making the argument that "the thyroid | |||
hormone" must work exclusively as an activator of genes, since most of the organ slices he tested didn't | |||
increase their oxygen consumption when it was added. In fact, the addition of thyroxine to brain slices | |||
suppressed their respiration by 6% during the experiment. Since most T3 is produced from T4 in the liver, not in | |||
the brain, I think that experiment had great significance, despite the ignorant interpretation of the author. An | |||
excess of thyroxine, in a tissue that doesn't convert it rapidly to T3, has an antithyroid action. (See Goumaz, | |||
et al, 1987.) This happens in many women who are given thyroxine; as their dose is increased, their symptoms get | |||
worse. The brain concentrates T3 from the serum, and may have a concentration 6 times higher than the serum | |||
(Goumaz, et al., 1987), and it can achieve a higher concentration of T3 than T4. It takes up and concentrates | |||
T3, while tending to expel T4. Reverse T3 (rT3) doesn't have much ability to enter the brain, but increased T4 | |||
can cause it to be produced in the brain. These observations suggest to me that the blood's T3:T4 ratio would be | |||
very "brain favorable" if it approached more closely to the ratio formed in the thyroid gland, and secreted into | |||
the blood. Although most synthetic combination thyroid products now use a ratio of four T4 to one T3, many | |||
people feel that their memory and thinking are clearer when they take a ratio of about three to one. More active | |||
metabolism probably keeps the blood ratio of T3 to T4 relatively high, with the liver consuming T4 at about the | |||
same rate that T3 is used. Since T3 has a short half life, it should be taken frequently. If the liver isn't | |||
producing a noticeable amount of T3, it is usually helpful to take a few micorgrams per hour. Since it restores | |||
respiration and metabolic efficiency very quickly, it isn't usually necessary to take it every hour or two, but | |||
until normal temperature and pulse have been achieved and stabilized, sometimes it's necessary to take it four | |||
or more times during the day. T4 acts by being changed to T3, so it tends to accumulate in the body, and on a | |||
given dose, usually reaches a steady concentration after about two weeks. An effective way to use supplements is | |||
to take a combination T4-T3 dose, e.g., 40 mcg of T4 and 10 mcg of T3 once a day, and to use a few mcg of T3 at | |||
other times in the day. Keeping a 14-day chart of pulse rate and temperature allows you to see whether the dose | |||
is producing the desired response. If the figures aren't increasing at all after a few days, the dose can be | |||
increased, until a gradual daily increment can be seen, moving toward the goal at the rate of about 1/14 per day | |||
<strong>VI. Diagnosis</strong> | |||
In the absence of commercial techniques that reflect thyroid physiology realistically, there is no valid | |||
alternative to diagnosis based on the known physiological indicators of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism. The | |||
failure to treat sick people because of one or another blood test that indicates "normal thyroid function," or | |||
the destruction of patients' healthy thyroid glands because one of the tests indicates hyperthyroidism, isn't | |||
acceptable just because it's the professional standard, and is enforced by benighted state licensing boards. | |||
Toward the end of the twentieth century, there has been considerable discussion of "evidence-based medicine." | |||
Good judgment requires good information, but there are forces that would over-rule individual judgment as to | |||
whether published information is applicable to certain patients. In an atmosphere that sanctions prescribing | |||
estrogen or insulin without evidence of an estrogen deficiency or insulin deficiency, but that penalizes | |||
practitioners who prescribe thyroid to correct symptoms, the published "evidence" is necessarily heavily biased. | |||
In this context, "meta-analysis" becomes a tool of authoritarianism, replacing the use of judgment with the | |||
improper use of statistical analysis. Unless someone can demonstrate the scientific invalidity of the methods | |||
used to diagnose hypothyroidism up to 1945, then they constitute the best present evidence for evaluating | |||
hypothyroidism, because all of the blood tests that have been used since 1950 have been.shown to be, at best, | |||
very crude and conceptually inappropriate methods. Thomas H. McGavack's 1951 book, The Thyroid, was | |||
representative of the earlier approach to the study of thyroid physiology. Familiarity with the different | |||
effects of abnormal thyroid function under different conditions, at different ages, and the effects of gender, | |||
were standard parts of medical education that had disappeared by the end of the century. Arthritis, | |||
irregularities of growth, wasting, obesity, a variety of abnormalities of the hair and skin, carotenemia, | |||
amenorrhea, tendency to miscarry, infertility in males and females, insomnia or somnolence, emphysema, various | |||
heart diseases, psychosis, dementia, poor memory, anxiety, cold extremities, anemia, and many other problems | |||
were known reasons to suspect hypothyroidism. If the physician didn't have a device for measuring oxygen | |||
consumption, estimated calorie intake could provide supporting evidence. The Achilles' tendon reflex was another | |||
simple objective measurement with a very strong correlation to the basal metabolic rate. Skin electrical | |||
resistance, or whole body impedance wasn't widely accepted, though it had considerable scientific validity. A | |||
therapeutic trial was the final test of the validity of the diagnosis: If the patient's symptoms disappeared as | |||
his temperature and pulse rate and food intake were normalized, the diagnostic hypothesis was confirmed. It was | |||
common to begin therapy with one or two grains of thyroid, and to adjust the dose according to the patient's | |||
response. Whatever objective indicator was used, whether it was basal metabolic rate, or serum cholesterol. or | |||
core temperature, or reflex relaxation rate, a simple chart would graphically indicate the rate of recovery | |||
toward normal health. | |||
<strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong> | |||
McGavack, Thomas Hodge.: The thyroid,: St. Louis, Mosby, 1951. 646 p. ill.Several chapters contributed by | |||
various authors.Call Numbers WK200 M145t 1951 (Rare Book). Endocrinology 1979 Sep; 105(3): 605-12. | |||
Carrier-mediated transport of thyroid hormones through the rat blood-brain barrier: primary role of | |||
albumin-bound hormone. Pardridge WM. Endocrinology 1987 Apr;120(4):1590-6. Brain cortex reverse triiodothyronine | |||
(rT3) and triiodothyronine concentrations under steady state infusions of thyroxine and rT3. Goumaz MO, Kaiser | |||
CA, Burger A.G. J Clin Invest 1984 Sep;74(3):745-52. Tracer kinetic model of blood-brain barrier transport of | |||
plasma protein-bound ligands. Empiric testing of the free hormone hypothesis. Pardridge WM, Landaw EM. Previous | |||
studies have shown that the fraction of hormone or drug that is plasma protein bound is readily available for | |||
transport through the brain endothelial wall, i.e., the blood-brain barrier (BBB). To test whether these | |||
observations are reconcilable with the free-hormone hypothesis, a tracer-kinetic model is used Endocrinology | |||
113(1), 391-8, 1983, Stimulation of sugar transport in cultured heart cells by triiodothyronine (T2) covalently | |||
bound to red blood cells and by T3 in the presence of serum, Dickstein Y, Schwartz H, Gross J, Gordon A. | |||
Endocrinology 1987 Sep; 121(3): 1185-91. Stereospecificity of triiodothyronine transport into brain, liver, and | |||
salivary gland: role of carrier- and plasma protein-mediated transport. Terasaki T, Pardridge WM. J. | |||
Neurophysiol 1994 Jul;72(1):380-91. Film autoradiography identifies unique features of [125I]3,3'5'-(reverse) | |||
triiodothyronine transport from blood to brain. Cheng LY, Outterbridge LV, Covatta ND, Martens DA, Gordon JT, | |||
Dratman MB Brain Res 1991 Jul 19;554(1-2):229-36. Transport of iodothyronines from bloodstream to brain: | |||
contributions by blood:brain and choroid plexus:cerebrospinal fluid barriers. Dratman MB, Crutchfield FL, | |||
Schoenhoff MB.. Mech Ageing Dev 1990 Mar 15;52(2-3):141-7. Blood-brain transport of triiodothyronine is reduced | |||
in aged rats. Mooradian AD Geriatrics Section, Tucson VA Medical Center, AZ. Endocrinology 1987 | |||
Sep;121(3):1185-91. Stereospecificity of triiodothyronine transport into brain, liver, and salivary gland: role | |||
of carrier- and plasma protein-mediated transport. Terasaki T, Pardridge WM. J Clin Invest 1984 | |||
Sep;74(3):745-52. Tracer kinetic model of blood-brain barrier transport of plasma protein-bound ligands. Empiric | |||
testing of the free hormone hypothesis. Pardridge WM, Landaw EM. Endocrinology 1980 Dec;107(6):1705-10. | |||
Transport of thyroid and steroid hormones through the blood-brain barrier of the newborn rabbit: primary role of | |||
protein-bound hormone. Pardridge WM, Mietus LJ. Endocrinology 1979 Sep; 105(3): 605-12. Carrier-mediated | |||
transport of thyroid hormones through the rat blood-brain barrier: primary role of albumin-bound hormone. | |||
Pardridge WM. Endocrinology 1975 Jun;96(6):1357-65. Triiodothyronine binding in rat anterior pituitary, | |||
posterior pituitary, median eminence and brain. Gordon A, Spira O. Endocr Rev 1989 Aug;10(3):232-74. The free | |||
hormone hypothesis: a physiologically based mathematical model. Mendel CM. Biochim Biophys Acta 1991 Mar | |||
4;1073(2):275-84. Transport of steroid hormones facilitated by serum proteins. Watanabe S, Tani T, Watanabe S, | |||
Seno M Kanagawa. D Novitzky, H Fontanet, M Snyder, N Coblio, D Smith, V Parsonnet, Impact of triiodothyronine on | |||
the survival of high-risk patients undergoing open heart surgery, Cardiology, 1996, Vol 87, Iss 6, pp 509-515. | |||
Biochim Biophys Acta 1997. Jan 16;1318(1-2):173-83 Regulation of the energy coupling in mitochondria by some | |||
steroid and thyroid hormones. Starkov AA, Simonyan RA, Dedukhova VI, Mansurova SE, Palamarchuk LA, Skulachev VP | |||
Thyroid 1996 Oct;6(5):531-6. Novel actions of thyroid hormone: the role of triiodothyronine in cardiac | |||
transplantation. Novitzky D. Rev Med Chil 1996 Oct;124(10):1248-50. [Severe cardiac failure as complication of | |||
primary hypothyroidism]. Novik V, Cardenas IE, Gonzalez R, Pena M, Lopez Moreno JM. Cardiology 1996 | |||
Nov-Dec;87(6):509-15. Impact of triiodothyronine on the survival of high-risk patients undergoing open heart | |||
surgery. Novitzky D, Fontanet H, Snyder M, Coblio N, Smith D, Parsonnet V Curr Opin Cardiol 1996 | |||
Nov;11(6):603-9. The use of thyroid hormone in cardiac surgery. Dyke C N Koibuchi, S Matsuzaki, K Ichimura, H | |||
Ohtake, S Yamaoka. Ontogenic changes in the expression of cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene in the cerebellar | |||
cortex of the perinatal hypothyroid rat. Endocrinology, 1996, Vol 137, Iss 11, pp 5096-5108. Biokhimiia 1984 | |||
Aug;49(8):1350-6. [The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Translocation of thyroid hormones through plasma | |||
membranes]. [Article in Russian] Azimova ShS, Umarova GD, Petrova OS, Tukhtaev KR, Abdukarimov A. The in vivo | |||
translocation of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) was studied. It was found that the TBPA-hormone | |||
complex penetrates-through the plasma membrane into the cytoplasm of target cells. Electron microscopic | |||
autoradiography revealed that blood serum TBPA is localized in ribosomes of target cells as well as in | |||
mitochondria, lipid droplets and Golgi complex. Negligible amounts of the translocated TBPA is localized in | |||
lysosomes of the cells insensitive to thyroid hormones (spleen macrophages). Study of T4- and T3-binding | |||
proteins from rat liver cytoplasm demonstrated that one of them has the antigenic determinants common with those | |||
of TBPA. It was shown autoimmunoradiographically that the structure of TBPA is not altered during its | |||
translocation. Am J Physiol 1997 Sep;273(3 Pt 1):C859-67. Cytoplasmic codiffusion of fatty acids is not specific | |||
for fatty acid binding protein. Luxon BA, Milliano MT [The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Intracellular | |||
functions of thyroxine-binding prealbumin] Azimova ShS; Normatov K; Umarova GD; Kalontarov AI; Makhmudova AA, | |||
Biokhimiia 1985 Nov;50(11):1926-32. The effect of tyroxin-binding prealbumin (TBPA) of blood serum on the | |||
template activity of chromatin was studied. It was found that the values of binding constants of TBPA for T3 and | |||
T4 are 2 X 10(-11) M and 5 X 10(-10) M, respectively. The receptors isolated from 0.4 M KCl extract of chromatin | |||
and mitochondria as well as hormone-bound TBPA cause similar effects on the template activity of chromatin. | |||
Based on experimental results and the previously published comparative data on the structure of TBPA, nuclear, | |||
cytoplasmic and mitochondrial receptors of thyroid hormones as well as on translocation across the plasma | |||
membrane and intracellular transport of TBPA, a conclusion was drawn, which suggested that TBPA is the "core" of | |||
the true thyroid hormone receptor. It was shown that T3-bound TBPA caused histone H1-dependent conformational | |||
changes in chromatin. Based on the studies with the interaction of the TBPA-T3 complex with spin-labeled | |||
chromatin, a scheme of functioning of the thyroid hormone nuclear receptor was proposed. [The nature of thyroid | |||
hormone receptors. Thyroxine- and triiodothyronine-binding proteins of mitochondria] Azimova ShS; Umarova GD; | |||
Petrova OS; Tukhtaev KR; Abdukarimov A. Biokhimiia 1984 Sep;49(9):1478-85. T4- and T3-binding proteins of rat | |||
liver were studied. It was found that the external mitochondrial membranes and matrix contain a protein whose | |||
electrophoretic mobility is similar to that of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) and which binds | |||
either T4 or T3. This protein is precipitated by monospecific antibodies against TBPA. The internal | |||
mitochondrial membrane has two proteins able to bind thyroid hormones, one of which is localized in the cathode | |||
part of the gel and binds only T3, while the second one capable of binding T4 rather than T3 and possessing the | |||
electrophoretic mobility similar to that of TBPA. Radioimmunoprecipitation with monospecific antibodies against | |||
TBPA revealed that this protein also the antigenic determinants common with those of TBPA. The in vivo | |||
translocation of 125I-TBPA into submitochondrial fractions was studied. The analysis of densitograms of | |||
submitochondrial protein fraction showed that both TBPA and hormones are localized in the same protein | |||
fractions. Electron microscopic autoradiography demonstrated that 125I-TBPA enters the cytoplasm through the | |||
external membrane and is localized on the internal mitochondrial membrane and matrix. [The nature of thyroid | |||
hormone receptors. Translocation of thyroid hormones through plasma membranes]. Azimova ShS; Umarova GD; Petrova | |||
OS; Tukhtaev KR; Abdukarimov A. Biokhimiia 1984 Aug;49(8):1350-6.. The in vivo translocation of thyroxine- | |||
binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) was studied. It was found that the TBPA-hormone complex penetrates-through | |||
the plasma membrane into the cytoplasm of target cells. Electron microscopic autoradiography revealed that blood | |||
serum TBPA is localized in ribosomes of target cells as well as in mitochondria, lipid droplets and Golgi | |||
complex. Negligible amounts of the translocated TBPA is localized in lysosomes of the cells insensitive to | |||
thyroid hormones (spleen macrophages). Study of T4- and T3-binding proteins from rat liver cytoplasm | |||
demonstrated that one of them has the antigenic determinants common with those of TBPA. It was shown | |||
autoimmunoradiographically that the structure of TBPA is not altered during its translocation. Endocrinology | |||
1987 Apr;120(4):1590-6 Brain cortex reverse triiodothyronine (rT3) and triiodothyronine concentrations under | |||
steady state infusions of thyroxine and rT3. Goumaz MO, Kaiser CA, Burger AG. Gen Comp Endocrinol 1996 | |||
Aug;103(2):200-8 Characteristics of the uptake of 3,5,3'-triiodo-L-thyronine and L-thyroxine into red blood | |||
cells of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). McLeese JM, Eales JG. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry | |||
1998 Feb;22(2):293-310. Increase in red blood cell triiodothyronine uptake in untreated unipolar major depressed | |||
patients compared to healthy volunteers. Moreau X, Azorin JM, Maurel M, Jeanningros R. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol | |||
Biol Psychiatry 1998 Feb;22(2):293-310. Increase in red blood cell triiodothyronine uptake in untreated unipolar | |||
major depressed patients compared to healthy volunteers. Moreau X, Azorin JM, Maurel M, Jeanningros R. Biochem J | |||
1982 Oct 15;208(1):27-34. Evidence that the uptake of tri-iodo-L-thyronine by human erythrocytes is | |||
carrier-mediated but not energy-dependent. Docter R, Krenning EP, Bos G, Fekkes DF, Hennemann G. J Clin | |||
Endocrinol Metab 1990 Dec;71(6):1589-95. Transport of thyroid hormones by human erythrocytes: kinetic | |||
characterization in adults and newborns. Osty J, Valensi P, Samson M, Francon J, Blondeau JP. J Endocrinol | |||
Invest 1999 Apr;22(4):257-61. Kinetics of red blood cell T3 uptake in hypothyroidism with or without hormonal | |||
replacement, in the rat. Moreau X, Lejeune PJ, Jeanningros R. | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<head><title>Tissue-bound estrogen in aging</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Tissue-bound estrogen in aging | |||
</h1> | |||
<em><p> | |||
The "Estrogen Replacement" industry is based on the doctrine that a woman's tissues are depleted of | |||
estrogen after menopause. This doctrine is false. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The concentration of a hormone in the blood doesn't directly represent the concentration in the various | |||
organs. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The amount of estrogen in tissue is decreased when progesterone is abundant. In the absence of | |||
progesterone, tissues retain estrogen even when there is little estrogen circulating in the blood. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many things suggest an increased estrogenic activity at menopause. For example, melatonin decreases | |||
sharply at puberty when estrogen increases, and then it decreases again at menopause. Prolactin | |||
(stimulated by estrogen) increases around puberty, and instead of decreasing at menopause, it often | |||
increases, and its increase is associated with osteoporosis and other age-related symptoms. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen is produced in many tissues by the enzyme aromatase, even in the breast and endometrium, | |||
although these are considered "target tissues" rather than endocrine glands. Aromatase increases with | |||
aging. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen is inactivated, mainly in the liver and brain, by being made water soluble by the attachment of | |||
glucuronic acid and/or sulfuric acid. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen's concentration in a particular tissue depends on many things, including its affinity or | |||
binding strength for components of that tissue, relative to its affinity for the blood; the activity in | |||
that tissue of the aromatase enzyme, which converts androgens to estrogen; the activity of the | |||
glucuronidase enzyme, that converts water-soluble estrogen glucuronides into the oil soluble active | |||
forms of estrogen; and the sulfatases and several other enzymes that modify the activity and solubility | |||
of the estrogens. The "estrogen receptors," proteins which bind estrogens in cells, are inactivated by | |||
progesterone, and activated by many physical and chemical conditions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Inflammation activates beta-glucuronidase, and antiinflammatory substances such as aspirin reduce many | |||
of estrogen's effects. | |||
</p></em> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
Doctrines are admitted into the "scientific canon" by those who have the power of censorship. In astronomy, | |||
Halton Arp's discovery of "anomalous" galactic red-shifts is practically unknown, because the journal | |||
editors say the observations are "just anomalies," or that the theories which could explain them are | |||
unconventional; but the actual problem is that they are strong evidence against The Big Bang, Hubble's Law, | |||
and the Expanding Universe. American science, since the 1940s, has probably been the most censored and | |||
doctrinaire in the world. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Gilbert Ling's revolution in cell biology remains outside the canon, despite the profound influence of MRI, | |||
which grew directly out of his view of the cell, because his work provided conclusive evidence that cells | |||
are not regulated by "semipermeable membranes and membrane pumps." Every field of science is ruled by a | |||
doctrinaire establishment. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Charles E. Brown-S"quard (1817-94) was a physiologist who pioneered scientific endocrinology, but who was | |||
ridiculed because of his claim that extracts of animal glands had an invigorating effect when injected. His | |||
place in the scientific canon is mainly as an object of ridicule, and the details of his case are perfectly | |||
representative of the way our "canon" has been constructed. The argument for dismissing his observations was | |||
that he used a water extract of testicles, and, according to the 20th century American biologists, | |||
testosterone is not water soluble, and so the water extract would have "contained no hormone." The argument | |||
is foolish, because living organs contain innumerable substances that will solublize oily molecules, but | |||
also because Brown-Sequard was describing an effect that wasn"t necessarily limited to a single chemical | |||
substance. (The transplanting of living cells to repair tissues is finally being accepted, but the pioneers | |||
in promoting tissue regeneration or repair with the transplantation of living, dead, or stressed cells--V. | |||
Filatov, L.V. Polezhaev, W.T. Summerlin, for example--were simply written out of history.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If Brown-S"quard"s extract couldn"t work because testosterone isn"t soluble in water, then what are we to | |||
think of the thousands of medical publications that talk about "free hormones" as the only active hormones? | |||
("Free hormone" is defined as the hormone that isn"t bound to a transporting protein, with the more or less | |||
explicit idea that it is dissolved in the water of the plasma or extracellular fluid.) Brown-S"quard"s | |||
tissue extracts would have contained solublizing substances including proteins and phospholipids, so the | |||
oily hormones would certainly be present (and active) in his extracts. But the thousands of people who | |||
ridiculed him committed themselves to the fact that steroid hormones are insoluble in water. By their own | |||
standard, they are selling an impossibility when they do calculations to reveal the amount of "free | |||
hormone," as something distinct from the protein bound hormone, in the patient"s blood. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The immense Hormone Replacement Therapy industry--which Brown-S"quard"s experiments foreshadowed--is based | |||
on the fact that the concentrations of some hormones in the blood serum decrease with aging. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
At first, it was assumed that the amount of the hormone in the blood corresponded to the effectiveness of | |||
that hormone. Whatever was in the blood was being delivered to the "target tissues." But as the idea of | |||
measuring "protein bound iodine" (PBI) to determine thyroid function came into disrepute (because it never | |||
had a scientific basis at all), new ideas of measuring "active hormones" came into the marketplace, and | |||
currently the doctrine is that the "bound" hormones are inactive, and the active hormones are "free." The | |||
"free" hormones are supposed to be the only ones that can get into the cells to deliver their signals, but | |||
the problem is that "free hormones" exist only in the imagination of people who interpret certain lab tests, | |||
as I discussed in the newsletter on thyroid tests (May, 2000). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1960s and 1970s, when the PBI test was disappearing, there was intense interest in--a kind of mania | |||
regarding--the role of "membranes" in regulating cell functions, and the membrane was still seen by most | |||
biologists as the "semipermeable membrane" which, "obviously," would exclude molecules as large as albumin | |||
and the other proteins that carry thyroid and other hormones in the blood. (In reality, and experimental | |||
observations, albumin and other proteins enter cells more or less freely, depending on prevailing | |||
conditions.) The membrane doctrine led directly to the "free hormone" doctrine. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This issue, of arguing about which form of a hormone is the "active" form, has to do with explaining how | |||
much of the blood-carried hormone is going to get into the "target tissues." If the membrane is a | |||
"semipermeable" barrier to molecules such as hormones, then specific receptors and transporters will be | |||
needed. If the concentration of a hormone inside the cell is higher than that in the blood, a "pump" will | |||
usually be invoked, to produce an "active transport" of the hormone against its concentration gradient. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>But if the membrane regulates the passage of hormones from blood to tissue cells, and especially if | |||
pumps are needed to move the hormone into the cell, how relevant is the measurement of hormones in the | |||
blood?</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Within the blood, progesterone and thyroid hormone (T3) are much more concentrated in the red blood cells | |||
than in the serum. Since it isn"t likely that red blood cells are "targets" for the sex hormones, or for | |||
progesterone or even thyroid, their concentration "against their gradient" in these cells suggests that a | |||
simple distribution by solubility is involved. Oily substances just naturally tend to concentrate inside | |||
cells because of their insolubility in the watery environment of the plasma and extracellular fluid. | |||
Proteins that have "oily" regions effectively bind oily molecules, such as fats and steroids. Even red blood | |||
cells have such proteins. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the case of oil soluble molecules, such as progesterone and estrogen, it"s important to explain that most | |||
of their "binding" to proteins or other oil-loving molecules is really the nearly passive consequence of the | |||
molecules" being forced away from the watery phase--they are hydrophobic, and although it would take a great | |||
amount of energy to make these insoluble substances enter the watery phase, the attractive force between | |||
them and the cell is usually small. This means that they can be freely mobile, while "bound" or concentrated | |||
within the cell. The oxygen atoms, and especially the phenolic group of estrogen, slightly reduce the | |||
hormones" affinity for simple oils, but they interact with other polar or aromatic groups, giving estrogen | |||
the ability to bind more strongly and specifically with some proteins and other molecules. Enzymes which | |||
catalyze estrogen"s oxidation-reduction actions are among the specific estrogen-binding proteins. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many proteins and lipoproteins bind steroids, but some intracellular proteins bind them so strongly that | |||
they have been--in a very teleological, if not anthropomorphic, way--considered as the switch by which the | |||
hormone turns on the cellular response. In the popular doctrine of the Estrogen Receptor, a few molecules of | |||
estrogen bind to the receptors, which carry them to the nucleus of the cell, where the activated receptors | |||
turn on the genes in charge of the female response. (Or the male response, or the growth response, or the | |||
atrophy response, or whatever genetic response estrogen is producing.) Once the switch has been thrown, the | |||
estrogen molecules have fulfilled their hormonal duty, and must get lost, so that the response isn"t | |||
perpetuated indefinitely by a few molecules. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although the Estrogen Receptor doctrine is worse than silly, there are real proteins which bind estrogen, | |||
and some of these are called receptors. The uterus, breast, and brain, which are very responsive to | |||
estrogen, bind, or concentrate, estrogen molecules. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When I was working on my dissertation, I tried to extract estrogens from hamster uteri, but the chemical | |||
techniques I was using to measure estrogen weren"t accurate for such small quantities. A few years later, S. | |||
Batra was able to extract the estrogen from human tissue in quantities large enough for accurate analysis by | |||
radioimmunoassay. (Batra, 1976.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
His crucial observation was that the difference in estrogen concentration between tissue and blood was | |||
lowest in the luteal phase, when progesterone is high: | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"The tissue/plasma ratio of E2 [estradiol] ranged from</strong> | |||
<strong>1.45 to 20.36 with very high values in early follicular phase and the lowest in mid-luteal | |||
phase."</strong> This means that progesterone prevents the tissue from concentrating estrogen. He made | |||
similar observations during pregnancy, <strong> | |||
with tissue estrogen decreasing as blood progesterone increased, so that</strong> | |||
<strong>there is less estrogen in the tissue than in the plasma.</strong> | |||
But in women who aren"t pregnant, and when their progesterone is low, the tissues may contain 20 to 30 times | |||
more estrogen than the plasma (in equal volumes). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In aging, the sharply decreased progesterone production creates a situation resembling the follicular phase | |||
of the menstrual cycle, allowing tissues to concentrate estrogen even when the serum estrogen may be low. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"<strong>In postmenopausal women, the tissue concentration of E2 was not significantly lower than in | |||
menstruating women in follicular phase. . . .</strong>" (Akerlund, et al., 1981.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides the relatively direct actions of progesterone on the estrogen receptors, keeping their concentration | |||
low, and its indirect action by preventing prolactin from stimulating the formation of estrogen receptors, | |||
there are many other processes that can increase or decrease the tissue concentration of estrogen, and many | |||
of these influences change with aging. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are two kinds of enzyme that produce estrogen. Aromatase converts male hormones into estrogen. | |||
Beta-glucuronidase converts the inactive estrogen-glucuronides into active estrogen. The healthy liver | |||
inactivates practically all the estrogen that reaches it, mostly by combining it with the "sugar acid," | |||
glucuronic acid. This makes the estrogen water soluble, and it is quickly eliminated in the urine. But when | |||
it passes through inflamed tissue, these tissues contain large amounts of beta-glucuronidase, which will | |||
remove the glucuronic acid, leaving the pure estrogen to accumulate in the tissue. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many kinds of liver impairment decrease its ability to excrete estrogen, and estrogen contributes to a | |||
variety of liver diseases. The work of the Biskinds in the 1940s showed that a dietary protein deficiency | |||
prevented the liver from detoxifying estrogen. Hypothyroidism prevents the liver from attaching glucuronic | |||
acid to estrogen, and so increases the body"s retention of estrogen, which in turn impairs the thyroid | |||
gland"s ability to secrete thyroid hormone. Hypothyroidism often results from nutritional protein | |||
deficiency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although we commonly think of the ovaries as the main source of estrogen, the enzyme which makes it can be | |||
found in all parts of the body. Surprisingly, in rhesus monkeys, aromatase in the arms accounts for a very | |||
large part of estrogen production. Fat and the skin are major sources of estrogen, especially in older | |||
people. <strong>The activity of aromatase increases with aging, and under the influence of prolactin, | |||
cortisol, prostaglandin, and the pituitary hormones, FSH (follicle stimulating hormone) and growth | |||
hormone.</strong> | |||
<strong>It is inhibited by progesterone, thyroid, aspirin, and high altitude.</strong> | |||
Aromatase can produce estrogen in fat cells, fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, breast and uterine tissue, | |||
pancreas, liver, brain, bone, skin, etc. Its action in breast cancer, endometriosis, uterine cancer, lupus, | |||
gynecomastia, and many other diseases is especially important. Aromatase in mammary tissue appears to | |||
increase estrogen receptors and cause breast neoplasia, independently of ovarian estrogen (Tekmal, et al., | |||
1999). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Women who have had their ovaries removed are usually told that they need to take estrogen, but animal | |||
experiments consistently show that removal of the gonads causes the tissue aromatases to increase. The loss | |||
of progesterone and ovarian androgens is probably responsible for this generalized increase in the formation | |||
of estrogen. In the brain, aromatase increases under the influence of estrogen treatment. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sulfatase is another enzyme that releases estrogen in tissues, and its activity is inhibited by | |||
antiestrogenic hormones. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In at least some tissues, progesterone inhibits the release or activation of beta-glucuronidase (which, | |||
according to Cristofalo and Kabakjian, 1975, increases with aging). Glucaric acid, which inhibits this | |||
enzyme, is being used to treat breast cancer, and glucuronic acid also tends to inhibit the intracellular | |||
release of estrogen by beta-glucuronidase. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although there is clearly a trend toward the rational use of antiestrogenic treatments for breast cancer, in | |||
other diseases the myth of estrogen deficiency still prevents even rudimentary approaches. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ever since Lipshutz" work in the 1940s, it has been established that the <strong><em> | |||
uninterrupted</em></strong> effect of a little estrogen is more harmful than larger but intermittent | |||
exposures. But after menopause, when progesterone stops its cyclic displacement of estrogen from the | |||
tissues, the tissues retain large amounts of estrogen continuously. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The menopause itself is produced by the prolonged exposure to estrogen beginning in puberty, in spite of the | |||
monthly protection of the progesterone produced by cycling ovaries. The unopposed action of the high | |||
concentration of tissue-bound estrogen after menopause must be even more harmful. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The decline of the antiestrogenic factors in aging, combined with the increase of pro-estrogenic factors | |||
such as cortisol and prolactin and FSH, occurs in both men and women. During the reproductive years, women"s | |||
cyclic production of large amounts of progesterone probably retards their aging enough to account for their | |||
greater longevity. Childbearing also has a residual antiestrogenic effect and is associated with increased | |||
longevity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Being aware of this pervasive increase in estrogen exposure with aging should make it possible to marshal a | |||
comprehensive set of methods for opposing that trend toward degeneration. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Contraception 1981 Apr;23(4):447-55. <strong>Comparison of plasma and myometrial tissue concentrations of | |||
estradiol-17 beta and progesterone in nonpregnant women.</strong> Akerlund M, Batra S, Helm G Plasma and | |||
myometrial tissue concentrations of estradiol (E2) and progesterone (P) were measured by radioimmunoassay | |||
techniques in samples obtained from women with regular menstrual cycles and from women in pre- <strong>or | |||
postmenopausal age.</strong> In women with regular cycles, the tissue concentration of E2 ranged from | |||
0.13 to 1.06 ng/g wet weight, with significantly higher levels around ovulation than in follicular or luteal | |||
phases of the cycle. The tissue concentration of P ranged from 2.06 to 14.85 ng/g wet weight with | |||
significantly higher level in luteal phase than in follicular phase. The tissue/plasma ratio of E2 ranged | |||
from <strong>1.45 to 20.36 with very high values in early follicular phase and the lowest in mid-luteal | |||
phase.</strong> The ratio for P ranged from 0.54 to 23.7 and was significantly lower in the luteal phase | |||
than in other phases of the cycle. One woman in premenopausal age with an ovarian cyst was the only case | |||
with<strong> | |||
a tissue/plasma ratio of E2 Less Than 1, since her plasma E2 levels were exceptionally high. In | |||
</strong> | |||
<strong>postmenopausal women, the tissue concentration of E2 was not significantly lower than in | |||
menstruating women in follicular phase, and the tissue concentration of P was not significantly lower | |||
than in fertile women in any of the phases.</strong> Neither in these women nor in menstruating women | |||
was there <strong> | |||
a close correlation between tissue and plasma levels. | |||
</strong> | |||
The present data indicate that the myometrial uptake capacity for ovarian steroids may be saturated, <strong | |||
>and also that a certain amount of these steroids is bound to tissue even if plasma levels are low.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biokhimiia 1984 Aug;49(8):1350-6. <strong>[The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Translocation of thyroid | |||
hormones through plasma membranes].</strong> Azimova ShS, Umarova GD, Petrova OS, Tukhtaev KR, | |||
Abdukarimov A<strong> | |||
The in vivo translocation of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) was studied. It was found | |||
that the TBPA-hormone complex penetrates-through the plasma membrane into the cytoplasm of target cells. | |||
Electron microscopic autoradiography revealed that blood serum TBPA is localized in ribosomes of target | |||
cells as well as in mitochondria, lipid droplets and Golgi complex. Negligible amounts of the | |||
translocated TBPA is localized in lysosomes of the cells insensitive to thyroid | |||
</strong>hormones (spleen macrophages). Study of T4- and T3-binding proteins from rat liver cytoplasm | |||
demonstrated that one of them has the antigenic determinants common with those of TBPA. It was shown | |||
autoimmunoradiographically that the structure of TBPA is not altered during its translocation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
Biokhimiia 1985 Nov;50(11):1926-32.<strong> | |||
[The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Intracellular functions of thyroxine-binding | |||
prealbumin</strong>] Azimova ShS; Normatov K; Umarova GD; Kalontarov AI; Makhmudova AA The effect of | |||
tyroxin-binding prealbumin (TBPA) of blood serum on the template activity of chromatin was studied. It was | |||
found that the values of binding constants of TBPA for T3 and T4 are 2 X 10(-11) M and 5 X 10(-10) M, | |||
respectively. The receptors isolated from 0.4 M KCl extract <strong>of chromatin and mitochondria as well as | |||
hormone-bound TBPA cause similar effects</strong> on the template activity of chromatin. Based on | |||
experimental results and the previously published comparative data on the structure of TBPA, nuclear, | |||
cytoplasmic and mitochondrial receptors of thyroid hormones as well as on <strong>translocation across the | |||
plasma membrane and intracellular transport of TBPA, a conclusion was drawn, which suggested that TBPA | |||
is the "core" of the true thyroid hormone receptor. It was shown that T3-bound TBPA caused histone | |||
H1-dependent conformational changes in chromatin.</strong> Based on the studies with the interaction of | |||
the TBPA-T3 complex with spin-labeled chromatin, a scheme of functioning of the thyroid hormone nuclear | |||
receptor was proposed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biokhimiia 1984 Sep;49(9):1478-85<strong>[The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Thyroxine- and | |||
triiodothyronine-binding proteins of mitochondria]</strong> | |||
Azimova ShS; Umarova GD; Petrova OS; Tukhtaev KR; Abdukarimov A. T4- and T3-binding proteins of rat liver | |||
were studied. It was found that the external mitochondrial membranes and matrix contain a protein whose | |||
electrophoretic mobility is similar to that of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) and which | |||
binds either T4 or T3. This protein is precipitated by monospecific antibodies against TBPA. The internal | |||
mitochondrial membrane has two proteins able to bind thyroid hormones, one of which is localized in the | |||
cathode part of the gel and binds only T3, while the second one capable of binding T4 rather than T3 and | |||
possessing the electrophoretic mobility similar to that of TBPA. Radioimmunoprecipitation with monospecific | |||
antibodies against TBPA revealed that this protein also the antigenic determinants common with those of | |||
TBPA. The in vivo translocation of 125I-TBPA into submitochondrial fractions was studied. The analysis of | |||
densitograms of submitochondrial protein fraction showed that both TBPA and hormones are localized in | |||
<strong>the same protein fractions. Electron microscopic autoradiography demonstrated that 125I-TBPA enters | |||
the cytoplasm through the external membrane and is localized on the internal mitochondrial membrane and | |||
matrix. | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biokhimiia 1984 Aug;49(8):1350-6<strong>. [The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Translocation of thyroid | |||
hormones through plasma membranes]</strong> Azimova ShS; Umarova GD; Petrova OS; Tukhtaev KR; | |||
Abdukarimov A The in vivo translocation of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) was studied. It | |||
was found that the TBPA-hormone complex penetrates-through the plasma membrane into the cytoplasm of target | |||
cells. Electron microscopic autoradiography revealed that blood serum TBPA is localized in ribosomes of | |||
target cells as well as in mitochondria, lipid droplets and Golgi complex. Negligible amounts of the | |||
translocated TBPA is localized in lysosomes of the cells insensitive to thyroid hormones (spleen | |||
macrophages). Study of T4- and T3-binding proteins from rat liver cytoplasm demonstrated that one of them | |||
has the antigenic determinants common with those of TBPA. It was shown autoimmunoradiographically that the | |||
structure of TBPA is not altered during its translocation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Probl Endokrinol (Mosk), 1981 Mar-Apr, 27:2, 48-52.<strong> | |||
[Blood estradiol level and G2-chalone content in the vaginal mucosa in rats of different ages]</strong> | |||
Anisimov VN; Okulov VB. <strong>"17 beta-Estradiol level was higher in the blood serum of rats aged 14 to 16 | |||
months with regular estral cycles during all the phases as compared to that in 3- to 4-month-old female | |||
rats. | |||
</strong> | |||
The latter ones had a higher vaginal mucosa G2-chalone concentration. The level of the vaginal mucosa | |||
G2-chalone decreased in young rats 12 hours after subcutaneous benzoate-estradiol injection<strong>. . . | |||
.</strong>". "Possible role of age-associated disturbances of the <strong>regulatory cell proliferation | |||
stimulant (estrogen) and its inhibitor (chalone) interactions in neoplastic target tissue transformation | |||
is discussed."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1979 Dec;11(6):603-10. <strong>Interrelations between plasma and tissue concentrations | |||
of 17 beta-oestradiol and progesterone during human pregnancy.</strong> Batra S, Bengtsson LP, Sjoberg | |||
NO Oestradiol and progesterone concentration in plasma, decidua, myometrium and placenta obtained from women | |||
undergoing Caesarian section at term and abortion at weeks 16-22 of pregnancy were determined. There was a | |||
significant increase in oestradiol concentration (per g wet wt) both in placenta, decidua and myometrium | |||
from mid-term to term. <strong>Both at mid-term and term oestradiol concentrations in decidua and myometrium | |||
were much smaller than those in the plasma (per ml).</strong> | |||
Progesterone concentration in placenta and in myometrium did not increase from mid-term to term where it | |||
increased significantly in decidua. <strong> | |||
Decidual and myometrial progesterone concentrations at mid-term were 2-3 times higher than those in | |||
plasma, | |||
</strong> | |||
but at term the concentrations in both these tissues were lower than in plasma. The ratio <strong | |||
>progesterone/oestradiol in plasma, decidua, myometrium and placenta at mid-term was 8.7, 112.2, 61.4 and | |||
370.0,</strong> respectively, and it decreased significantly in the myometrium and placenta but was | |||
nearly unchanged in plasma and decidua at term. The general conclusion to be drawn from the present study is | |||
<strong>the lack of correspondence between the plasma concentrations and the tissue concentrations of female | |||
sex steroids during pregnancy.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrinology 1976 Nov; 99(5): 1178-81. <strong>Unconjugated estradiol in the myometrium of | |||
pregnancy.</strong> Batra S. By chemically digesting myometrium in a mixture of NaOH and sodium dodecyl | |||
sulphate, estradiol could be recovered almost completely by extraction with ethyl acetate. The concentration | |||
of estradiol-17beta (E2) in the extracted samples could reliably be determined by radioimmunoassay. Compared | |||
to its concentration in the plasma, E2 in the pregnant human myometrium was very low, and as a result, the | |||
tissue/plasma estradiol concentration ratio was less than 0.5. In the pseudopregnant rabbit, this ratio | |||
ranged between 16 and 20. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem 1989 Jan;32(1A):35-9. <strong>Tissue specific effects of progesterone on progesterone and | |||
estrogen receptors in the female urogenital tract.</strong> Batra S, Iosif CS. The effect of | |||
progesterone administration on progesterone and estrogen receptors in the uterus, vagina and urethra of | |||
rabbits was studied. After 24 h of<strong> | |||
progesterone treatment the concentration of cytosolic progesterone receptors decreased to about 25% of | |||
the control value in the uterus, whereas no significant change in receptor concentration was observed in | |||
the vagina or the urethra. The concentration of the nuclear progesterone receptor did not change in any | |||
of the three tissues studied. The apparent dissociation constant (Kd) of nuclear progesterone receptor | |||
increased after progesterone treatment in all</strong> three tissues. Although the Kd of the cytosolic | |||
progesterone receptor also increased in all tissues, the difference was significant for only the vagina | |||
and<strong> | |||
urethra. The concentration of cytosolic estrogen receptors in the uterus decreased significantly (P less | |||
than 0.001) after progesterone treatment whereas the Kd value increased slightly (P less than 0.05). In | |||
vagina or the urethra,</strong> | |||
there was no change in either estrogen receptor concentration or Kd values after progesterone treatment. | |||
These data clearly showed that the reduction by progesterone of progesterone and estrogen receptor | |||
concentrations occurs only in the uterus and not in the vagina or the urethra. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1980 Apr 15;136(8):986-91. <strong>Female sex steroid concentrations in the ampullary | |||
and isthmic regions of the human fallopian tube and their relationship to plasma concentrations during | |||
the menstrual cycle.</strong> | |||
Batra S, Helm G, Owman C, Sjoberg NO, Walles B. The concentrations of estradiol-17 beta (E2) and | |||
progesterone (P) were measured in the ampullary and isthmic portions of the fallopian tube of nonpregnant | |||
menstruating women and the cyclic fluctuations were related to the concentrations of these hormones in | |||
plasma. The steroid concentrations were determined by radioimmunoassays. There was no significant difference | |||
in the isthmic and ampullary concentrations of either steroid in any of the menstrual phases. The mean value | |||
for E2 was highest in the ovulatory phase and for P during the luteal phase. The tissue (per gm)/plasma (per | |||
ml) ratio for the steroid concentrations was above unity in all measurements. The ratio for E2 was highest | |||
(isthmus:12, ampulla:8) in the follicular phase and for P (isthmus:26, ampulla:18) during ovulation. Since | |||
<strong> | |||
these highest ratios were attained when plasma steroid concentrations were relatively low they were | |||
interpreted as reflections of a maximal receptor contribution.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biol Reprod 1980 Apr;22(3):430-7.<strong> | |||
Sex steroids in plasma and reproductive tissues of the female guinea pig.</strong> Batra S, Sjoberg NO, | |||
Thorbert G. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1997 Apr;61(3-6):323-39.<strong> | |||
Steroid control and sexual differentiation of brain aromatase.</strong> Balthazart J. "Together, these | |||
data indicate that <strong> | |||
the removal of estrogens caused by steroidal inhibitors decreases the synthesis of ARO,</strong> | |||
presumably at the transcriptional level." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Science, Vol. 94, No. 2446 (Nov. 1941), p. 462. <strong>Diminution in Ability of the Liver to Inactivate | |||
Estrone in Vitamin B Complex Deficiency,</strong> Biskind, M.S., and G. R. Biskind. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am. Jour. Clin. Path., Vol. 16 (1946), No. 12, pages 737-45.<strong> | |||
The Nutritional Aspects of Certain Endocrine Disturbances,</strong> Biskind, G. R., and M. S. | |||
Biskind.<strong> </strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biol Reprod, 1993 Oct, 49:4, 647-52<strong>. Pathologic effect of estradiol on the hypothalamus.</strong> | |||
Brawer JR; Beaudet A; Desjardins GC; Schipper HM. Estradiol provides physiological signals to the brain | |||
throughout life that are indispensable for the development and regulation of reproductive function. In | |||
addition to its multiple physiological actions, we have shown that estradiol is also selectively cytotoxic | |||
to beta-endorphin neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. The mechanism underlying this neurotoxic | |||
action appears to involve the conversion of estradiol to catechol estrogen and subsequent oxidation to | |||
o-semiquinone free radicals. The estradiol-induced loss of beta-endorphin neurons engenders a compensatory | |||
increment in mu opioid binding in the medial preoptic area rendering this region supersensitive to residual | |||
beta-endorphin or to other endogenous opioids. The consequent persistent opioid inhibition results in a | |||
cascade of neuroendocrine deficits that are ultimately expressed as a chronically attenuated plasma LH | |||
pattern to which the ovaries respond by becoming anovulatory and polycystic. This neurotoxic action of | |||
estradiol may contribute to a number of reproductive disorders in humans and in animals in which aberrant | |||
hypothalamic function is a major component. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev, 1991 May, 58:2-3, 207-20. <strong>Exposure to estradiol impairs luteinizing hormone | |||
function during aging.</strong> Collins TJ; Parkening TA Department of Anatomy and Neurosciences, | |||
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77550. "This work evaluated the anterior pituitary (AP) | |||
component of the H-P axis by determining the ability of perifused AP to release LH following sustained but | |||
pulsatile LHRH stimulation. The normal dual discharge profile of LH was affected by age." <strong>"The role | |||
of estradiol (E2) in AP aging was further tested as AP from ovariectomized (OVXed) mice, deprived of E2 | |||
since puberty, responded as well as the mature proestrous group. In contrast, aged mice subjected to | |||
long-term E2 exposure (cycling or OVXed plus E2 replacement) failed to produce the dual response | |||
pa</strong>ttern." "Furthermore, <strong>E2 is a major factor in altering LH function and appears to act | |||
before middle age."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 1975 Jan-Feb;4(1):19-28. <strong>Lysosomal enzymes and aging in vitro: subcellular enzyme | |||
distribution and effect of hydrocortisone on cell life-span.</strong> Cristofalo VJ, Kabakjian J. "The | |||
acid phosphatase and beta glucuronidase activities of four subcellular fractions (nuclear, | |||
mitochondrial-lysosomal, microsomal, supernatant) of WI-38 cells were compared during in vitro aging. | |||
A<strong>ll of the fractions showed an age-associated increase in activity.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrinology, 1992 Nov, 131:5, 2482-4.<strong> | |||
Vitamin E protects hypothalamic beta-endorphin neurons from estradiol neurotoxicity.</strong> Desjardins | |||
GC; Beaudet A; Schipper HM; Brawer JR. Estradiol valerate (EV) treatment has been shown to result in the | |||
destruction of 60% of beta-endorphin neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. Evidence suggests that the | |||
mechanism of EV-induced neurotoxicity involves the conversion of estradiol to catechol estrogen and | |||
subsequent oxidation to free radicals in local peroxidase-positive astrocytes. In this study, we examined | |||
whether treatment with the antioxidant, vitamin E, protects beta-endorphin neurons from the neurotoxic | |||
action of estradiol. Our results demonstrate that chronic vitamin E treatment prevents the decrement in | |||
hypothalamic beta-endorphin concentrations resulting from arcuate beta-endorphin cell loss, suggesting that | |||
the latter is mediated by free radicals. Vitamin E treatment also prevented the onset of persistent vaginal | |||
cornification and polycystic ovarian condition which have been shown to result from the EV-induced | |||
hypothalamic pathology. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Exp Gerontol, 1995 May-Aug, 30:3-4, 253-67.<strong> | |||
Estrogen-induced hypothalamic beta-endorphin neuron loss: a possible model of hypothalamic | |||
aging.</strong> | |||
Desjardins GC; Beaudet A; Meaney MJ; Brawer JR. Over the course of normal aging, all female mammals with | |||
regular cycles display an irreversible arrest of cyclicity at mid-life. Males, in contrast, exhibit | |||
gametogenesis until death.<strong> | |||
Although it is widely accepted that exposure to estradiol throughout life contributes to reproductive | |||
aging, a unified hypothesis of the role of estradiol in reproductive senescence has yet to | |||
emerge.</strong> Recent evidence derived from a rodent model of chronic estradiol-mediated accelerated | |||
reproductive senescence now suggests such a hypothesis. It has been shown that chronic estradiol exposure | |||
results in the <strong>destruction of greater than 60% of all beta-endorphin neurons in the arcuate nucleus | |||
</strong> | |||
while leaving other neuronal populations spared. This loss of opioid neurons is prevented by treatment with | |||
antioxidants indicating that it results from <strong>estradiol-induced formation of free radicals. | |||
Furthermore, we have shown that this beta-endorphin cell loss is followed by a compensatory upregulation | |||
of mu opioid receptors in the vicinity of LHRH cell bodies.</strong> The increment in mu opioid | |||
receptors presumably renders the opioid target cells supersensitive to either residual beta-endorphin or | |||
other endogenous mu ligands, such as met-enkephalin, thus resulting in chronic opioid <strong>suppression of | |||
the pattern of LHRH release, and subsequently that of LH.</strong> Indeed, prevention of the | |||
neuroendocrine effects of estradiol by antioxidant treatment also <strong>prevents the cascade of | |||
neuroendocrine aberrations resulting in anovulatory acyclicity.</strong> The loss of beta-endorphin | |||
neurons along with the paradoxical opioid supersensitivity which ensues, provides a unifying framework in | |||
which to interpret the diverse features that characterize the reproductively senescent female. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Geburtshilfe Frauenheilkd 1994 Jun; 54(6):321-31.<strong> | |||
Hormonprofile bei hochbetagten Frauen und potentielle Einflussfaktoren.</strong> Eggert-Kruse W; Kruse | |||
W; Rohr G; Muller S; Kreissler-Haag D; Klinga K; Runnebaum B. <strong>[Hormone profile of elderly women and | |||
potential modifiers]. | |||
</strong> | |||
Eggert-Kruse W, Kruse W, Rohr G, Muller S, Kreissler-Haag D, Klinga K, Runnebaum B. "In 136 women with a | |||
median age of 78 (60-98) years the serum concentrations of FSH, LH, prolactin, estradiol-17 beta, | |||
testosterone and DHEA-S were determined completed by GnRH and ACTH stimulation tests in a subgroup. This | |||
resulted in median values for FSH of 15.8 ng/ml, LH 6.4 ng/ml, prolactin 6.9 ng/ml, estradiol 16 pg/ml, | |||
testosterone 270 pg/ml and 306 ng/ml for DHEA-S. <strong>No correlation with age in this population was | |||
found for gonadotropins as well as the other hormones for an age level of up to 98 years."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Acta Physiol Hung 1985;65(4):473-8. <strong>Peripheral blood concentrations of progesterone and oestradiol | |||
during human pregnancy and delivery.</strong> | |||
Kauppila A, Jarvinen PA To evaluate the significance of progesterone and estradiol in human uterine activity | |||
during pregnancy and delivery the blood concentrations of these hormones were monitored weekly during the | |||
last trimester of pregnancy and at the onset of labour in 15 women, and before and 3 hours after the | |||
induction of term delivery in 83 parturients. Neither plasma concentrations of progesterone or estradiol nor | |||
the ratio of progesterone to estradiol changed significantly during the last trimester of pregnancy or at | |||
the onset of delivery. After the<strong> | |||
induction of delivery parturients with initial progesterone dominance (ratio of progesterone to | |||
estradiol higher than 5 before induction) demonstrated a significant fall in serum concentration of | |||
progesterone and in the ratio of progesterone to estradiol while estradiol concentration rose | |||
significantly. In estrogen dominant women (progesterone to estradiol ratio equal to or lower than 5) the | |||
serum concentration of progesterone and the ratio of progesterone to</strong> estradiol rose | |||
significantly during the 3 hours after the induction of delivery. Our results suggest that the peripheral | |||
blood levels of progesterone and estradiol do not correlate with the tissue biochemical changes which | |||
prepare the uterine cervix and myometrium for delivery. The observation that the ratio of progesterone to | |||
estradiol decreased in progesterone-dominant and increased in estrogen-dominant women stresses the | |||
importance of a well balanced equilibrium of these hormones for prostaglandin metabolism during human | |||
delivery. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1984 Nov 1;150(5 Pt 1):501-5. <strong>Estrogen and progesterone receptor and hormone | |||
levels in human myometrium and placenta in term pregnancy.</strong> Khan-Dawood FS, Dawood MY. Estradiol | |||
and progesterone receptors in the myometrium, decidua, placenta, chorion, and amnion of eight women who | |||
underwent elective cesarean section at term were determined by means of an exchange assay. The hormone | |||
levels in the peripheral plasma and cytosol of these tissues were measured by radioimmunoassays. Maternal | |||
plasma and the placenta had high concentrations of estradiol and progesterone, with the placenta having 12 | |||
times more progesterone<strong> | |||
than in maternal plasma but only half the concentrations of estradiol in</strong> maternal plasma. The | |||
decidua and placenta had detectable levels of cytosol and nuclear estradiol receptors, but the myometrium | |||
had no measurable cytosol estradiol receptors, <strong> | |||
whereas the chorion and amnion had neither cytosol nor nuclear estradiol receptors. However, the chorion | |||
and amnion had significantly higher concentrations of estradiol</strong> in the cytosol than those in | |||
the decidua and myometrium. Only the decidua and myometrium had cytosol and nuclear progesterone receptors, | |||
but the placenta, amnion, and chorion had neither cytosol nor nuclear progesterone receptors. In contrast, | |||
progesterone hormone levels were significantly higher in the placenta, amnion, and chorion than in the | |||
decidua and myometrium. The findings indicate that, in the term pregnant uterus, (1) the placenta, amnion, | |||
and chorion are rich in progesterone, estradiol, and nuclear estradiol receptors but have no progesterone | |||
receptors, (2) the decidua and myometrium have nuclear estradiol and progesterone receptors, and (3) <strong | |||
>the myometrium has a higher progesterone/estradiol ratio than that of the peripheral plasma, thus | |||
suggesting a highly progesterone-dominated uterus.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1982 Jan 29;104(2):570-6. <strong>Progesterone-induced inactivation of nuclear | |||
estrogen receptor in the hamster uterus is mediated by acid phosphatase.</strong> MacDonald RG, Okulicz | |||
WC, Leavitt, W.W. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Steroids 1982 Oct;40(4):465-73. <strong>Progesterone-induced estrogen receptor-regulatory factor is not 17 | |||
beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase.</strong> MacDonald RG, Gianferrari EA, Leavitt WW These studies were | |||
done to determine if the progesterone-induced estrogen receptor-regulatory factor (ReRF) in hamster uterus | |||
is 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17 beta-HSD), i.e. that rapid loss of nuclear estrogen receptor | |||
(Re) might be due to enhanced estradiol oxidation to estrone catalyzed by 17 beta-HSD. Treatment of | |||
proestrous hamsters with progesterone (approximately 25 mg/kg BW) for either 2 h or 4 h had no effect on 17 | |||
beta-HSD activity measured as the rate of conversion of [6,7-3H]estradiol to [3H]estrone by whole uterine | |||
homogenates at 35 degrees C. During this same time interval, progesterone treatment increased the rate of | |||
inactivation of the occupied form of nuclear Re as determined during a 30 min incubation of uterine nuclear | |||
extract in vitro at 36 degrees C. Since we previously demonstrated that such in vitro Re-inactivating | |||
activity represents ReRF, the present studies show that ReRF is not 17 beta-HSD or a modifier of that | |||
enzyme. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1987 Aug; 157(2):312-317. <strong>Age-related changes in the female hormonal environment | |||
during reproductive life.</strong> Musey VC, Collins DC, Musey PI, Martino-Saltzman D, Preedy JR | |||
Previous studies have indicated that serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone rise with age during the | |||
female reproductive life, but the effect on other hormones is not clear. We studied the effects of age, | |||
independent of pregnancy, by comparing serum hormone levels in two groups of nulliparous, <strong> | |||
premenopausal women aged 18 to 23 and 29 to 40 years. We found that increased age during reproductive | |||
life is accompanied by a significant rise in both basal and stimulated serum follicle-stimulating | |||
hormone levels. This was accompanied by an increase in the serum level of estradiol-17 beta and the | |||
urine | |||
</strong> | |||
levels of estradiol-17 beta and 17 beta-estradiol-17-glucosiduronate. The serum level of estrone sulfate | |||
decreased with age. Serum and urine levels of other estrogens were unchanged. The basal and stimulated | |||
levels of luteinizing hormone were also unchanged. There was a significant decrease in basal and stimulated | |||
serum prolactin levels. Serum levels of dehydroepiandrosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate decreased | |||
with age, but serum testosterone was unchanged. It is concluded that significant age-related changes in the | |||
female hormonal environment occur during the reproductive years. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrinology 1981 Dec;109(6):2273-5. <strong>Progesterone-induced estrogen receptor-regulatory factor in | |||
hamster uterine nuclei: preliminary characterization in a cell-free system.</strong> Okulicz WC, | |||
MacDonald RG, Leavitt WW.<strong> | |||
"In vitro studies have demonstrated a progesterone-induced activity associated with the uterine nuclear | |||
fraction which resulted in the loss of nuclear estrogen receptor."</strong> "This progesterone-dependent | |||
stimulation of estrogen receptor loss was absent when nuclear extract was prepared in phosphate buffer | |||
rather than Tris buffer. In addition, sodium molybdate and sodium metavanadate (both at 10 mM) inhibited | |||
this activity in nuclear extract. These observations support the hypothesis that progesterone modulation of | |||
estrogen action may be accomplished by induction (or activation) of an estrogen receptor-regulatory factor | |||
(Re-RF), and this factor may in turn <strong>act to eliminate the occupied form of estrogen receptor from | |||
the nucleus,</strong> perhaps through a hypothetical dephosphorylation-inactivation mechanism." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
American Journal of Human Biology, v.8, n.6, (1996): 751-759. <strong>Ovarian function in the latter half of | |||
the reproductive lifespan. | |||
</strong>O'Rourke, M T; Lipson, S F; Ellison, P T. "Thus, ovarian endocrine function over the course of | |||
reproductive life represents a process of change, but not one of generalized functional decline." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Gerontol, 1978 Mar, 33:2, 191-6.<strong> | |||
Circulating plasma levels of pregnenolone, progesterone, estrogen, luteinizing hormone, and follicle | |||
stimulating hormone in young and aged C57BL/6 mice during various stages of pregnancy.</strong> | |||
Parkening TA; Lau IF; Saksena SK; Chang MC Young (3-5 mo of age) and senescent (12-15 mo of age) multiparous | |||
C57BL/6 mice were mated with young males (3-6 mo of age) and the numbers of preimplantation embryos and | |||
implantation sites determined on days 1 (day of plug), 4, 9, and 16 of pregnancy. The numbers of viable | |||
embryos were significantly lower (p less than 0.02 to p less than 0.001) in senescent females compared with | |||
young females on all days except day 1 of pregnancy. Plasma samples tested by radioimmunoassay indicated | |||
circulating estradiol-17B was significantly lower (P less than 0.05) on day 1 and <strong>higher (p less | |||
than 0.05) on day 4 | |||
</strong>in older females, whereas FSH was higher on days 4, 9, and 16 (p less than 0.02 to p less than | |||
0.001) in senescent females when compared with samples from young females. Levels of pregnenolone, | |||
progesterone, estrone, and LH were not significantly different at any stage of pregnancy in the two age | |||
groups. From the hormonal data it did not appear that degenerating corpora lutea were responsible for the | |||
declining litter size in this strain of aged mouse. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biol Reprod, 1985 Jun, 32:5, 989-97. <strong>Orthotopic ovarian transplantations in young and aged C57BL/6J | |||
mice.</strong> Parkening TA; Collins TJ; Elder FF. "Orthotopic ovarian transplantations were done | |||
between young (6-wk-old) and aged (17-mo-old) C57BL/6J mice. The percentages of mice mating following | |||
surgery from the four possible ovarian transfer combinations were as follows: young into young, 83%; <strong | |||
>young into aged, 46%;</strong> aged into young, 83%; and aged into aged, 36%." <strong>"The only | |||
statistical differences found between the transfer groups occurred in FSH concentrations. Plasma FSH was | |||
markedly elevated (P less than 0.005) in young recipients with ovaries transplanted from aged donors, in | |||
comparison to young recipients with ovaries from young donors. | |||
</strong> | |||
These data indicate that the aging ovary and uterus play a secondary role in <strong>reproductive failure | |||
and that the aging hypothalamic-hypophyseal complex is primarily responsible for the loss of fecundity | |||
in older female C57BL/6J mice." | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Endocrinol, 1978 Jul, 78:1, 147-8. <strong>Postovulatory levels of progestogens, oestrogens, luteinizing | |||
hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone in the plasma of aged golden hamsters exhibiting a delay in | |||
fertilization.</strong> Parkening TA; Saksena SK; Lau IF. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biology of Reproduction, v.49, n.2, (1993): 387-392. <strong>Controlled neonatal exposure to estrogens: A | |||
suitable tool for reproductive aging studies in the female rat.</strong> Rodriguez, P; Fernandez-Galaz, | |||
C; Tejero, A. "The present study was designed to determine whether the modification of exposure time to | |||
large doses of estrogens provided a reliable model for early changes in reproductive aging." "Premature | |||
occurrence of vaginal opening was observed in all three estrogenized groups independently of EB exposure. | |||
However, females bearing implants for 24 h had first estrus at the same age as their controls and cycled | |||
regularly, and neither histological nor gonadal alterations could be observed at 75 days. Interestingly, | |||
they failed to cycle regularly at 5 mo whereas controls continued to cycle." "On the other hand, the | |||
increase of EB exposure (Ei5, EI) resulted in a gradual and significant delay in the onset of first estrus | |||
and in a high number of estrous phases, as frequently observed during reproductive decline. At 75 days, the | |||
ovaries of these last two groups showed a reduced number of corpora lutea and <strong>an increased number of | |||
large follicles</strong>. According to this histological pattern, ovarian weight and progesterone (P) | |||
content gradually decreased whereas both groups showed higher estradiol (E-2) content than controls. This | |||
resulted in <strong>a higher E-2:P ratio, comparable to that observed in normal aging rats.</strong> | |||
<strong>The results allow us to conclude that the exposure time to large doses of estrogens is critical to | |||
the gradual enhancement of reproductive decline. Furthermore, exposures as brief as 24 h led to a | |||
potential early model for aging studies that will be useful to verify whether neuroendocrine changes | |||
precede gonadal impairment."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1996 Apr;81(4):1495-501. <strong>Characterization of reproductive hormonal dynamics | |||
in the perimenopause.</strong> Santoro N, Brown JR, Adel T, Skurnick JH. "<strong>Overall mean estrone | |||
conjugate excretion was</strong> | |||
<strong><hr /></strong> | |||
<strong>and was similarly elevated in both follicular and luteal phases.</strong> | |||
<strong>Luteal phase pregnanediol excretion was diminished in the perimenopausal women</strong> compared to | |||
that in younger normal subjects (range for integrated pregnanediol,<strong> 1.0-8.4 vs. 1.6-12.7 </strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<strong> | |||
conclude that altered ovarian function in the perimenopause can be observed as early as age 43 yr and | |||
include hyperestrogenism, hypergonadotropism, and decreased luteal phase progesterone excretion. These | |||
hormonal alterations may well be responsible for the increased gynecological morbidity that | |||
characterizes this period of life." | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res, 1994 Jul 25, 652:1, 161-3.<strong> | |||
The 21-aminosteroid antioxidant, U74389F, prevents estradiol-induced depletion of hypothalamic | |||
beta-endorphin in adult female rats.</strong> Schipper HM; Desjardins GC; Beaudet A; Brawer JR.<strong> | |||
"A single intramuscular injection of 2 mg estradiol valerate (EV) results in neuronal degeneration and | |||
beta-endorphin depletion in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus of adult female rats." "The present | |||
findings support the hypothesis that the toxic effect of estradiol on hypothalamic beta-endorphin | |||
neurons is mediated by free radicals." | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Clin Exp Obstet Gynecol 2000;27(1):54-6. <strong>Hormonal reproductive status of women at menopausal | |||
transition compared to that observed in a group of midreproductive-aged women.</strong> Sengos C, | |||
Iatrakis G, Andreakos C, Xygakis A, Papapetrou P. <strong>CONCLUSION: The reproductive hormonal patterns | |||
in</strong> | |||
<strong>perimenopausal women favor a relatively hypergonadotropic hyper-estrogenic milieu.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocr Relat Cancer 1999 Jun;6(2):307-14.<strong> | |||
Aromatase overexpression and breast hyperplasia, an in vivo model--continued overexpression of aromatase | |||
is sufficient to maintain hyperplasia without circulating estrogens, and aromatase inhibitors abrogate | |||
these preneoplastic changes in mammary glands.</strong> Tekmal RR, Kirma N, Gill K, Fowler K "To test | |||
directly the role of breast-tissue estrogen in initiation of breast cancer, we have developed the | |||
aromatase-transgenic mouse model and demonstrated for the first time that increased mammary estrogens | |||
resulting from the overexpression of aromatase in mammary glands lead to the induction of various | |||
preneoplastic and neoplastic changes that are similar to early breast cancer." "Our current studies show | |||
aromatase overexpression is sufficient to induce and maintain early preneoplastic and neoplastic changes in | |||
female mice without circulating ovarian estrogen. Preneoplastic and neoplastic changes induced in mammary | |||
glands as a result of aromatase overexpression can be completely abrogated with the administration of the | |||
aromatase inhibitor, letrozole. Consistent with complete reduction in hyperplasia,<strong> | |||
we have also seen downregulation of estrogen receptor and a decrease in cell proliferation</strong> | |||
markers, suggesting aromatase-induced hyperplasia can be treated with aromatase inhibitors. Our studies | |||
demonstrate that <strong>aromatase overexpression alone, without circulating estrogen, is responsible for | |||
the induction of breast hyperplasia and these changes can be abrogated using aromatase | |||
inhibitors."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 2000 Jun;73(3-4):141-5. <strong>Elevated steroid sulfatase expression in breast | |||
cancers.</strong> Utsumi T, Yoshimura N, Takeuchi S, Maruta M, Maeda K, Harada N. In situ estrogen | |||
synthesis makes an important contribution to the high estrogen concentration found in breast cancer tissues. | |||
Steroid sulfatase which hydrolyzes several sulfated steroids such as estrone sulfate, dehydroepiandrosterone | |||
sulfate, and cholesterol sulfate may be involved. In the present study, we therefore, assessed steroid | |||
sulfatase mRNA levels in breast malignancies and background tissues from 38 patients by reverse | |||
transcription and polymerase chain reaction. The levels in breast cancer tissues were significantly | |||
increased at 1458.4+/-2119.7 attomoles/mg RNA (mean +/- SD) as compared with 535.6+/-663.4 attomoles/mg RNA | |||
for non-malignant tissues (P<0.001). Thus, increased steroid sulfatase expression may be partly | |||
responsible for local overproduction of estrogen and provide a growth advantage for tumor cells. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann N Y Acad Sci 1986;464:106-16. <strong>Uptake and concentration of steroid hormones in mammary | |||
tissues.</strong> Thijssen JH, van Landeghem AA, Poortman J In order to exert their biological effects, | |||
steroid hormones must enter the cells of target tissues and after binding to specific receptor molecules | |||
must remain for a prolonged period of time in the nucleus. Therefore the endogenous levels and the | |||
subcellular distribution of estradiol, estrone, DHEAS, DHEA ad 5-Adiol were measured in normal breast | |||
tissues and in malignant and nonmalignant breast tumors from pre- and postmenopausal women. For estradiol | |||
the highest tissue levels were found in the malignant samples<strong>. No differences were seen in these | |||
levels between pre- and postmenopausal women despite the largely different peripheral blood | |||
levels.</strong> For estrone no differences were found between the tissues studied. Although the | |||
estradiol concentration was higher in the estradiol-receptor-positive than in the receptor-negative tumors, | |||
no correlation was calculated between the estradiol and the receptor consent. Striking differences were seen | |||
between the breast and uterine tissues for the total tissue concentration of estradiol, the ratio between | |||
estradiol and estrone, and the subcellular distribution of both estrogens. <strong>At similar receptor | |||
concentrations in the tissues these differences cannot easily be explained.</strong> Regarding the | |||
androgens, the tissue/plasma gradient was higher for DHEA than for 5-Adiol, and for DHEAS there was very | |||
probably a much lower tissue gradient. The highly significant correlation between the androgens suggests an | |||
intracellular metabolism of DHEAS to DHEA and 5-Adiol. <strong>Lower concentrations of DHEAS and DHEA were | |||
observed in the malignant tissues compared with the normal ones and the benign lesions.</strong> For | |||
5-Adiol no differences were found and therefore these data do not support our original hypothesis on the | |||
role of this androgen in the etiology of breast abnormalities. Hence the way in which adrenal androgens | |||
express their influence on the breast cells remains unclear. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1978 Jul;9(1):59-66. <strong>Sex hormone concentrations in post-menopausal | |||
women.</strong> Vermeulen A, Verdonck L. "Plasma sex hormone concentrations (testosterone, (T), | |||
androstenedione (A), oestrone (E1) and oestradiol (E2) were measured in forty post-menopausal women more | |||
than 4 years post-normal menopause." <strong>"Sex hormone concentrations in this group of postmenopausal | |||
women (greater than 4YPM) did not show any variation as a function of age,</strong> with the possible | |||
exception of E2 which showed a tendency to decrease in the late post-menopause. E1 and to a lesser extent E2 | |||
as well as the E1/A ratio were significantly corelated with degree of obesity or fat mass, suggesting a | |||
possible role of fat tissue in the aromatization of androgens. Neither the T/A nor the E2/E1 ratios were | |||
correlated with fat mass, suggesting that the reduction of 17 oxo-group does not occur in fat tissue. The | |||
E1/A ratio was significantly higher than the reported conversion rate of A in E1." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem 1984 Nov;21(5):607-12. <strong>The endogenous concentration of estradiol and estrone in | |||
normal human postmenopausal endometrium.</strong> Vermeulen-Meiners C, Jaszmann LJ, Haspels AA, Poortman | |||
J, Thijssen JH The endogenous estrone (E1) and estradiol (E2) levels (pg/g tissue) were measured in 54 | |||
postmenopausal, atrophic endometria and compared with the E1 and E2 levels in plasma (pg/ml). The results | |||
from the tissue levels of both steroids<strong> | |||
showed large variations and there was no significant correlation with their plasma levels. The mean E2 | |||
concentration in tissue was 420 pg/g, 50 times higher than in plasma and the E1 concentration of 270 | |||
pg/g was 9 times higher. | |||
</strong>The E2/E1 ratio in tissue of 1.6, was higher than the corresponding E2/E1 ratio in plasma, being | |||
0.3. <strong>We conclude that normal postmenopausal atrophic endometria contain relatively high | |||
concentrations of estradiol and somewhat lower estrone levels.</strong> These tissue levels do not lead | |||
to histological effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1998 Dec; 83(12):4474-80. <strong>Deficient 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type | |||
2 expression in endometriosis: failure to metabolize 17beta-estradiol.</strong> Zeitoun K, Takayama K, | |||
Sasano H, Suzuki T, Moghrabi N, Andersson S, Johns A, Meng L, Putman M, Carr B, Bulun SE.<strong> </strong> | |||
"Aberrant aromatase expression in stromal cells of endometriosis gives rise to conversion of circulating | |||
androstenedione to estrone in this tissue, whereas aromatase expression is absent in the eutopic | |||
endometrium. In this study, we initially demonstrated by Northern blotting transcripts of the reductive | |||
17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17betaHSD) type 1, which catalyzes the conversion of estrone to | |||
17beta-estradiol, in both eutopic endometrium and endometriosis. <strong>Thus, it follows that the product | |||
of the aromatase reaction, namely estrone, that is weakly estrogenic can be converted to the potent | |||
estrogen, 17beta-estradiol, in endometriotic tissues. It was previously</strong> | |||
<strong> | |||
demonstrated that progesterone stimulates the inactivation of 17beta-estradiol</strong> through | |||
conversion to estrone in eutopic endometrial epithelial cells." <strong>"In conclusion, inactivation of | |||
17beta-estradiol is impaired in endometriotic tissues due to deficient expression of 17betaHSD-2, which | |||
is normally expressed in eutopic endometrium in response to progesterone."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1999 Aug 2;261(2):499-503. <strong>Piceatannol, a stilbene phytochemical, | |||
inhibits mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase activity by targeting the F1 complex.</strong> Zheng J, Ramirez VD. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Eur J Pharmacol 1999 Feb 26;368(1):95-102.<strong> | |||
Rapid inhibition of rat brain mitochondrial proton F0F1-ATPase activity by estrogens: comparison with | |||
Na+, K+ -ATPase of porcine cortex. Zheng J, Ramirez VD</strong>. "The data indicate that the ubiquitous | |||
mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase is a specific target site for estradiol and related estrogenic compounds; however, | |||
under this in vitro condition, the effect seems to require pharmacological concentrations." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1999 Jan;68(1-2):65-75. <strong>Purification and identification of an estrogen | |||
binding protein from rat brain: oligomycin sensitivity-conferring protein (OSCP), a subunit of | |||
mitochondrial F0F1-ATP synthase/ATPase.</strong> Zheng J, Ramirez VD. "This finding opens up the | |||
possibility that estradiol, and probably other compounds with<strong> | |||
similar structures, in addition to their classical genomic mechanism, may interact with ATP | |||
synthase/ATPase by binding to OSCP, and thereby modulating cellular energy metabolism."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p>© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com</p> | |||
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<html> | |||
<head><title>Blocking Tissue Destruction</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Blocking Tissue Destruction | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
There always seems to be a rough balance between tissue regeneration and tissue degeneration, with growth | |||
and repair occurring when the equilibrium shifts in one direction,and with atrophy or degeneration occurring | |||
when the balance shifts in the other direction. If we can understand the mechanisms of atrophy, and how to | |||
retard or to block tissue destruction, then we can restore the balance to a degree which might allow | |||
regeneration to occur, even if we don't clearly understand the mechanisms of growth. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Skin and bones are such different types of tissue that it will be useful to start with them, because if we | |||
can see similar processes of degeneration or regeneration in them, then the chances are good that the same | |||
processes will occur in other tissues too. Bone is a relatively stable tissue, while skin is a tissue whose | |||
cells divide rapidly. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It is common medical knowledge that cortisone and realted glucocorticioid-type hormones cause skin to | |||
atrophy, becoming thinner. Using topical applications of a synthetic derivative of cortisione,CM Papa and A | |||
M. Kligman showed that the atrophy extended to the pigment cells,reducing theirr size and eliminating most | |||
of their dendritic branches. Some animal studies have found that estrogen caused the skin to become thinner. | |||
The other steroids they tested,progesterone, testosterone,and pregnenolone, acted in the opposite direction, | |||
making aged and atrophied skin thicker and more regular. They also made the pigment cells larger, and | |||
increased their branchinhg.l Since these hormones were already known to have protective actions against | |||
cortisone and estrogen, these results were not too surprising, though they did directly contradict the | |||
claims of people who made estrogen-containing cosmetics. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since progesterone and pregnenolone do not cause healthy, young skin to thicken, their effect in damaged | |||
skin is probably partly to replace the deficiency of that type of steroid which occurs with aging, and to | |||
offset the damaging effects of the catabolic hormones, whose influence does not decrease with age. | |||
</p> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many years ago it was found that in old age a woman's estrogens were increasedd relative to the 17-keto | |||
steroids adrenal androgens. Later, it was found that the conversion of androgen to estrogen increases with | |||
age in both men and women, and that this occurs largely in fat cells. Several years ago, P. K. Siiteri found | |||
that low thyroid modified the enzymes of fat cells in a way that would tend to increase the conversion of | |||
androgen to estrogen. More recently, it was found that adding progesterone to the enzymes had the opposite | |||
effect of aging and hypothyroidism, protecting the androgen from conversion to estrogen. These researchers | |||
(C. J. Newton and colleagues, of London) concluded that the decreased output of progesterone after the | |||
menopause might account for the increased production of estrogen.3 Since progesterone declines in aging men, | |||
too, this could account for the same process in men. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vitamin A's effect on the skin opposes that of estrogen.4 There are several mechanisms that could account | |||
for this. Vitamin A is used in the formation of steroids, and since the skin is a major site of steroid | |||
metabolism, vitamin A might help to maintain the level of the anti-catabolic steroids. A deficiency of | |||
vitamin A causes excessive release of the lysosomal enzymes, acid hydrolases, resulting in tissue | |||
catabolism.5 Also, vitamin A is necessary for the proper differentiation of cells in skin and other | |||
membranes. A deficiency tends to cause an increased rate of cell division, with the production of abnormal | |||
cells, and a substitution of keratinized cells for other types. Estrogen also promotes keratinization and | |||
speeds cell division. A deficiency of vitamin A can cause leukoplakia in the mouth and on the cervix of the | |||
uterus; although this is considered "pre-cancerous," I have found it to be very easily reversible, as I have | |||
discussed elsewhere.6 I suspect that the intracellular fiber, keratin, is produced when a cell can't afford | |||
to do anything more complex. Adequate vitamin A speeds protein synthesis,7 and allows it to be used more | |||
efficiently. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Prolactin (which is promoted by estrogen, and inhibited by progesterone) increases with stress and with age. | |||
It probably affects every tissue, but it seems to have its greatest efects on the secretory membranes. It is | |||
known to have strong effects on the kidney, gut and skin (sweat and oil glands, hair follicles, and feathers | |||
inbirds), and on the gills of fish. Its involvement with milk production suggests that it might mobilize | |||
calcium from bones, and inf fact it does contribute to osteoporosis. This was foreseen by G. Bourne, in his | |||
book on the metabolism of hard tissues, when he suggested that estrogen, acting through the pituitary, might | |||
be expected to promote osteoporosis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since reading Bourne's book, I have doubted that it was rational to use estrogen to prevent osteoporosis, | |||
especially when it is known to be carcinogenic and when the ratio of estrogen to and | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
androgens and progesterone increases after menopause. Now that several publications have appeared clearly | |||
showing that estrogen increases prolactin, that prolactin increases with | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
cancellous bone; adrenal androgens. Thyroid. Rate of formation, overall metabolic rate. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>ARTHRITIS AND NATURAL HORMONES</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A very healthy 71 year-old man was under his house repairing the foundation, when a support slipped and let | |||
the house fall far enough to break some facial bones. During his recovery, he developed arthritis in his | |||
hands. It is fairly common for arthritis to appear shortly after an accident, a shock, or surgery, and Han | |||
Selye's famous work with rats shows that when stress exhausts the adrenal glands (so they are unable to | |||
produce normal amounts of cortisone and related steroid hormones), arthritis and other "degenerative" | |||
diseases are likely to develop. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But when this man went to his doctor to "get something for his arthritis," he was annoyed that the doctor | |||
insisted on giving him a complete physical exam, and wouldn't give him a shot of cortisone. The examination | |||
showed low thyroid function, and the doctor prescribed a supplement of thyroid extract, explaining that | |||
arthritis is one of the many symptoms of hypothyroidism. The patient agreed to take the thyroid, but for | |||
several days he grumbled about the doctor 'fixing something that wasn't wrong' with him, and ignoring his | |||
arthritis. But in less than two weeks, the arthritis had entirely disappeared. He lived to be 89, without a | |||
recurrence of arthritis. (He died iatrogenically, while in good health.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Selye's work with the diseases of stress, and the anti-stress hormones of the adrenal cortex, helped many | |||
scientists to think more clearly about the interaction of the organism with its environment, but it has led | |||
others to focus too narrowly on hormones of the adrenal cortex (such as cortisol and cortisone), and to | |||
forget the older knowledge about natural resistance. There are probably only a few physicians now practicing | |||
who would remember to check for hypothyroidism in an arthritis patient, or in other stress-related | |||
conditions. Hypothyroidism is a common cause of adrenal insufficiency, but it also has some direct effects | |||
on joint tissues. In chronic hypothyroidism (myxedema and cretinism), knees and elbows are often bent | |||
abnormally. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By the 1930's, it was well established that the resistance of the organism depended on the energy produced | |||
by respiration under the influence of the thyroid gland, as well as on the adrenal hormones, and that the | |||
hormones of pregnancy (especially progesterone) could substitute for the adrenal hormones. In a sense, the | |||
thyroid hormone is the basic anti-stress hormone, since it is required for the production of the adrenal and | |||
pregnancy hormones. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A contemporary researcher, F. Z. Meerson, is putting together a picture of the biological processes involved | |||
in adapting to stress, including energy production, nutrition, hormones, and changes in cell structure. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While one of Selye's earliest observations related gastrointestinal bleeding to stress, Meerson's work has | |||
revealed in a detailed way how the usually beneficial hormone of adaptation, cortisone, can cause so many | |||
other harmful effects when its action is too prolonged or too intense. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some of the harmful effects of the cortisone class of drugs (other than gastro-intestinal bleeding) are: | |||
Hypertension, osteoporosis, delayed healing, atrophy of the skin, convulsions, cataracts, glaucoma, | |||
protruding eyes, psychic derangements, menstrual irregularities, and loss of immunity allowing infections | |||
(or cancer) to spread. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While normal thyroid function is required for the secretion of the adrenal hormones, the basic signal which | |||
causes cortisone to be formed is a drop in the blood glucose level. The increased energy requirement of any | |||
stress tends to cause the blood sugar to fall slightly, but hypothyroidism itself tends to depress blood | |||
sugar. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The person with low thyroid function is more likely than a normal person to require cortisone to cope with a | |||
certain amount of stress. However, if large amounts of cortisone are produced for a long time, the toxic | |||
effects of the hormone begin to appear. According to Meerson, heart attacks are provoked and aggravated by | |||
the cortisone produced during stress. (Meerson and his colleagues have demonstrated that the progress of a | |||
heart attack can be halted by a treatment including natural substances such as vitamin E and magnesium.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While hypothyroidism makes the body require more cortisone to sustain blood sugar and energy production, it | |||
also limits the ability to produce cortisone, so in some cases stress produces symptoms resulting from a | |||
deficiency of cortisone, including various forms of arthritis and more generalized types of chronic | |||
inflammation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Often, a small physiological dose of natural hydrocortisone can help the patient meet the stress, without | |||
causing harmful side-effects. While treating the symptoms with cortisone for a short time, it is important | |||
to try to learn the basic cause of the problem, by checking for hypothyroidism, vitamin A deficiency, | |||
protein deficiency, a lack of sunlight, etc. (I suspect that light on the skin directly increases the skin's | |||
production of steroids, without depending on other organs. Different steroids probably involve different | |||
frequencies of light, but orange and red light seem to be important frequencies.) Using cortisone in this | |||
way, physiologically rather than pharmacologically, it is not likely to cause the serious problems mentioned | |||
above. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Stress-induced cortisone deficiency is thought to be a factor in a great variety of unpleasant conditions, | |||
from allergies to ulcerative colitis, and in many forms of arthritis. The stress which can cause a cortisone | |||
deficiency is even more likely to disturb formation of progesterone and thyroid hormone, so the fact that | |||
cortisone can relieve symptoms does not mean that it has corrected the problem. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
According to the Physicians' Desk Referenc, hormones similar to cortisone are useful for treating rheumatoid | |||
arthritis, post-traumatic osteoarthritis, synovitis of osteoarthritis, acute gouty arthritis, acute | |||
nonspecific tenosynovitis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, acute and subacute bursitis, and | |||
epicondylitis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although cortisone supplementation can help in a great variety of stress-related diseases, no curewill take | |||
place unless the basic cause is discovered. Besides the thyroid, the other class of adaptive hormones which | |||
are often out of balance in the diseases of stress, is the group of hormones produced mainly by the gonads: | |||
the "reproductive hormones." During pregnancy these hormones serve to protect the developing baby from the | |||
stresses suffered by the mother, but the same hormones function as part to the protective anti-stress system | |||
in the non-pregnant individual, though at a lower level. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some forms of arthritis are known to improve or even to disappear during pregnancy. As mentioned above, the | |||
hormones of pregnancy can make up for a lack of adrenal cortex hormones. During a healthy pregnancy, many | |||
hormones are present in increased amounts, including the thyroid hormones. Progesterone, which is the most | |||
abundant hormone of pregnancy, has both anti-inflammatory and anesthetic actions, which would be of obvious | |||
benefit in arthritis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are other naturally anesthetic hormones which are increased during pregnancy, including DHEA, which is | |||
being studied for its anti-aging, anti-cancer, and anti-obesity effects. (One of the reasons that is | |||
frequently given for the fact that this hormone hasn't been studied more widely is that, as a natural | |||
substance, it has not been monopolized by a drug patent, and so no drug company has been willing to invest | |||
money in studying its medical uses.) These hormones also have the ability to control cell division, which | |||
would be important in forms of arthritis that involve invasive tissue growth. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While these substances, so abundant in pregnancy, have the ability to substitute for cortisone, they can | |||
also be used by the adrenal glands to produce cortisol and related hormones. But probably the most | |||
surprising property of these natural steroids is that they protect against the toxic side-effects of | |||
excessive adrenal hormones. And they seem to have no side-effects of their own; after about fifty years of | |||
medical use, no toxic side effects have been found for progesterone or pregnenolone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pregnenolone is the material the body uses to form either progesterone or DHEA. Others, including DHEA, | |||
haven't been studied for so long, but the high levels which are normally present in healthy people would | |||
suggest that replacement doses, to restore those normal levels, would not be likely to produce toxic side | |||
effects. And, considering the terrible side effects of the drugs that are now widely used, these drugs would | |||
be justifiable simply to prevent some of the toxic effects of conventional treatment. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It takes a new way of thinking to understand that these protective substances protect against an excess of | |||
the adrenal steroids, as well as making up for a deficiency. Several of these natural hormones also have a | |||
protective action against various poisons; Selye called this their "catatoxic" effect. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides many people whose arthritis improved with only thyroid supplementation, I have seen 30 people use | |||
one or more of these other natural hormones for various types of arthritis, usually with a topical | |||
application. Often the pain is relieved within a few minutes. I know of several other people who used | |||
progesterone topically for inflamed tendons, damaged cartilage, or other inflammations. Only one of these, a | |||
woman with rheumatoid arthritis in many joints, had no significant improvement. An hour after she had | |||
applied it to her hands and feet, she enthusiastically reported that her ankle had stopped hurting, but | |||
after this she said she had no noticeable improvement. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
We often hear that "there is no cure for arthritis, because the causes are not known." If the cause is an | |||
imbalance in the normal hormones of adaptation and resistance, then eliminating the cause by restoring | |||
balance will produce a true cure. But if it is more profitable to sell powerful drugs than to sell the | |||
nutrients needed to form natural hormones (or to supplement those natural hormones) we can't expect the drug | |||
companies to spend any money investigating that sort of cure. And at present the arthritis market amounts to | |||
billions of dollars in drug sales each year. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<head><title>The transparency of life: Cataracts as a model of age-related disease</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
The transparency of life: Cataracts as a model of age-related disease | |||
</h1> | |||
<em><p> | |||
Cataracts can disappear when the eye's metabolic condition is corrected. A supply of energy is essential | |||
to maintain the transparent structure. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lactic acid increases as carbon dioxide decreases, during a typical energy deficiency. Deficient | |||
thyroid, and the resulting excess of cortisol relative to pregnenolone and progesterone, define the | |||
energy deficiency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Increased lactate relative to CO2 in the cell alters cell pH and electrical charge, causing swelling. | |||
Swelling and increased water content characterize the cataract. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
High altitude is inversely related to cataracts, despite the known role of sunlight in causing | |||
cataracts; this is a strong confirmation of the protective role of carbon dioxide. | |||
</p></em> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
In the markets around Lake Patzcuaro, they sell green transparent fish, about 6 inches long. When cooked, | |||
the meat is white, like ordinary fish. Most fish filets are a little translucent, but are at least cloudy, | |||
and usually pink by transmitted light. I don"t know how the transparent fish work, because it seems that the | |||
blood and the network of blood vessels needed to sustain muscle activity would diffuse the light. Anyway, | |||
cooking disrupts the mysteriously ordered state of water and proteins that makes them transparent, roughly | |||
the way egg-white loses its transparency when it is cooked. I have never heard a convincing explanation for | |||
the opacity of cooked egg-white, either, but anything that disrupts the original structuring of the | |||
protein-water interaction will destroy the transparency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Around 1970, I used a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), which is the basis for the | |||
procedure known as MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), to compare the state of water in old (uterine) tissue | |||
and young tissue. Old tissue predictably contains less water than young tissue, but I found that the water | |||
in the old tissue was in a relatively free and uncontrolled state. When tissue swells and takes up water, | |||
more of the water is likely to be in this uncontrolled state, and this is one of the things that makes MRI | |||
so useful, because tumors, for example, show up vividly because of their large amount of uncontrolled | |||
("unbound") water. I suspect that the measurements I made on uterine tissue showed a localized effect, that | |||
opposed the general trend toward increased dryness with aging. In the case of cataracts, this is clearly the | |||
case<strong>: </strong> Most of the lens becomes drier with age, but at a certain point there is a reversal, | |||
and some of the tissue takes up too much water. That"s why I refer to cataracts as a model of age-related | |||
disease, rather than as a model of aging. In this sense, I am including them among the inflammatory diseases | |||
of aging--colitis, arthritis, and cancer, for example. MRI now can show developing cataracts before they are | |||
visible, because of increased water content in the area. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The lens of the eye is a fairly dense, tough, transparent living structure, which can develop opaque areas, | |||
cataracts, as a result of old age, poisoning, radiation, disease, or trauma. The varieties of cataract | |||
relate to the causes. Most of the oxidative metabolism of the lens is in or near the epithelial layer that | |||
surrounds it. Old-age cataracts most often begin in this region. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although the efficient oxidative energy metabolism occurs near the surface of the lens, <strong>there is a | |||
constant flow of fluid through the lens,</strong> | |||
entering it mainly in the front and back, and leaving on its "sides" or equator (considering the front and | |||
back as the poles, the direction light passes through). Oxygen and nutrients are supplied to the lens by way | |||
of this circulation of fluid, entering mostly from the aqueous humor in front (which also supplies the | |||
cornea), but also from the vitreous humor behind the lens. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When the flow of nutrients and energy is impaired, the organized state of the protein and water system in | |||
the cell is damaged, and an excess of water is taken up by the cells, as the protein content decreases. The | |||
loss of organization causes light to be dispersed, with a loss of transparency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The lens of the eye is usually treated as something so specialized that it is hardly considered to be part | |||
of our living substance, just as dentistry has tended to treat teeth as inert things to be approached | |||
mechanically, rather than physiologically. <strong>The lens"s circulatory system is very interesting, | |||
because of what it says about the nature of living substance. In the absence of blood vessels, it | |||
provides its own flow of nutrients.</strong> This flow is reminiscent of the flow of substances through | |||
the dentine channels of the teeth, through the axons of nerves (two-way transport in a very narrow channel), | |||
and, in some ways recalls the flow of fluids in plants, called "guttation" (drop formation), which is | |||
disturbing to botanists, because it is contrary to the textbook descriptions of proper physiology. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>The flow of material through lens cells, dentine canals, and nerve axons should allow us to gain a | |||
perspective in which these observable processes become a model for other biological situations</strong> | |||
in which "transport" occurs<strong>:</strong> Kidney, intestine, or the skin of frogs, for example, in which | |||
water, ions, and other solutes are moved in considerable quantities. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When cells metabolize, they create gradients. In the cell, electrical, chemical, osmotic, and thermal | |||
gradients, for example, are constantly being produced or maintained. The whole substance of the cell is | |||
involved in its life processes. Because of prejudices introduced 200 years ago, the life of the cell has | |||
been relegated to its "membrane" (where hypothetical "membrane pumps" reside) and its nucleus. <strong> | |||
When the term "cell" (hollow space) came into use instead of "corpuscle" (little body), a mind-set came | |||
into existence that discounted the importance of most of the living material,</strong> and claimed that | |||
it was a mere "random solution." Random solutions don"t do much. The wonderful "membrane," under the | |||
direction of the nucleus (and its set of instructions), took care of everything. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Whenever assimilation or excretion took place, it was explained by inventing a property possessed by the | |||
cell "membranes." Therefore, we have physiology textbooks that have an unfounded explanation for everything. | |||
Before Copernicus, planetary movements were described as arbitrary "epicycles." They didn't make sense, but | |||
people studied them and felt that they were important. "Membrane physiology" is the modern equivalent of the | |||
Ptolemaic epicycles. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
We know that glucose can be metabolized into pyruvic acid, which, in the presence of oxygen, can be | |||
metabolized into carbon dioxide. Without oxygen, pyruvic acid can be converted into lactic acid. The | |||
production of lactic acid tends to increase the pH inside the cell, and its excretion can lower the pH | |||
outside the cell. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The decrease of carbon dioxide that generally accompanies increased lactic acid, corresponds to increased | |||
intracellular pH. Carbon dioxide binds to many types of protein, for example by forming carbamino groups, | |||
changing the protein conformation, as well as its electrical properties, such as its isoelectric point. With | |||
increased pH, cell proteins become more strongly ionized, tending to separate, allowing water to enter the | |||
spaces, in the same way a gel swells in an alkaline solution. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The Bohr-Haldane effect describes the fact that hemoglobin releases oxygen in the presence of carbon | |||
dioxide, and releases carbon dioxide in the presence of oxygen. When oxygen is too abundant, it makes | |||
breathing more difficult, and one of its effects is to cause carbon dioxide to be lost rapidly. At high | |||
altitude, more carbon dioxide is retained, and this makes cellular respiration more efficient. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The importance of carbon dioxide to cell control process, and to the structure of the cell and the structure | |||
of proteins in general suggested that degenerative diseases would be less common at high altitude. Wounds | |||
and broken bones heal faster at high altitude, but the available statistics are especially impressive in two | |||
of the major degenerative conditions, cancer and cataracts. | |||
</p> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
The two biggest studies of altitude and cataracts (involving 12,217 patients in one study, and 30,565 | |||
lifelong residents in a national survey in Nepal) showed a negative correlation between altitude and the | |||
incidence of cataract. At high altitude, cataracts appeared at a later age. <strong>In Nepal, an increase of | |||
a few thousand feet in elevation decreased the incidence of cataracts by 2.7 times. At the same time, it | |||
was found that exposure to sunlight increased the incidence of cataracts, and since the intensity of | |||
ultraviolet radiation is increased with altitude, this makes the decreased incidence of cataracts even | |||
more important.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
All of the typical causes of cataracts, aging, poisons, and radiation, decrease the formation of carbon | |||
dioxide, and tend to increase the formation of lactic acid.<strong> | |||
Lactic acid excess is typically found in eyes with cataracts.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The electrical charge on the structural proteins will tend to increase in the presence of lactic acid or the | |||
deficiency of carbon dioxide, and the increase of charge will tend to increase the absorption of water. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The lens can survive for a considerable length of time <em>in vitro </em> | |||
(since it has its own circulatory system),<em> </em> | |||
so it has been possible to demonstrate that changes in the composition of the fluid can cause opacities to | |||
form, or to disappear. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Oxidants, including hydrogen peroxide which occurs naturally in the aqueous humor, can cause opacities to | |||
form quickly, but they will also disappear quickly in a solution that restores metabolic energy. The lens | |||
regulates itself powerfully<strong>;</strong> for example, it will swell when put into a hypotonic solution, | |||
but will quickly adapt, returning to approximately its normal size. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Several years ago, I saw what appeared to be oxidant-induced cataracts. Two women had a very sudden onset of | |||
cataracts, and I asked about their diet and supplements<strong>;</strong> it turned out that one of them had | |||
begun taking 500 mg of zinc daily a few months earlier, and the other had begun taking 600 mg of zinc and | |||
250 mg of iron, on her doctor"s recommendation, just a couple of months before the cataracts appeared. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For some reason, there have been many nutritional supplements sold as cataract remedies in the form of eye | |||
drops. I suppose a trace of the material could diffuse through the cornea into the aqueous humor, where it | |||
might make a difference in the lens"s nutrient supply, but it seems more reasonable to treat the body as a | |||
whole, nourishing every part in a balanced way. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides living at a high elevation or breathing extra carbon dioxide, the most certain way to increase the | |||
amount of carbon dioxide in the eye, and to prevent an excess of lactic acid, is to make sure that your | |||
thyroid function is adequate. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One man who took thyroid, USP, and vitamin E told me that his cataracts had regressed, but I haven"t known | |||
other people who tried this. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If a person already has distinct cataracts, it might be worthwhile to experiment with a relatively high | |||
degree of hypercapnia, for example, breathing a 5% mixture of CO2 in air. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Carbon dioxide, at higher levels than are normal at sea level, has a profound effect on free radicals, | |||
reducing the free radical activity in the blood to approximately zero, before reaching the level that | |||
produces acidosis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are several situations in which carbon dioxide affects the hydration, water content, of biological | |||
materials, that I think give an insight into its effects on the lens. Hydrophilic glycoproteins are involved | |||
in each case. These are proteins with attached chains of sugar molecules that make them associate with a | |||
large amount of water. In the cornea, increased carbon dioxide strongly protects against swelling. The bulk | |||
of the cornea is a connective tissue that is relatively simple and passive compared to the compact cellular | |||
structure of the lens, and it is conventional to describe the thin layers of cells on the inside and outside | |||
of the cornea as being responsible for the water content of the underlying substance. However, even when the | |||
epithelial cells are removed, it has been demonstrated that carbon dioxide is able to prevent corneal | |||
swelling. (M.V. Riley, et al., "The roles of bicarbonate and CO2 in transendothelial fluid movement and | |||
control of corneal thickness," <em> | |||
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 36(1),</em> 103-112, 1995.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bronchial mucous secretions are an even simpler system, so it is very interesting that carbon dioxide is | |||
recognized as the most powerful regulator of their behavior. (This has important implications for "cystic | |||
fibrosis," or mucoviscidosis.) Goodman and Gilman (page 1068, <em> | |||
Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics,</em> 2nd Edition, Macmillan Co., 1956), say | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Among inhalants, steam and carbon dioxide have been found to be excellent expectorants. Relative humidity | |||
above 85 per cent liquefies sputum, decreases its viscosity...." "Carbon dioxide is the most effective agent | |||
of all. It not only lowers the viscosity of tenacious sputum, thereby facilitating expectoration, but it | |||
decreases the volume of sputum by promoting its active resorption by bronchial mucosa." "A five to ten per | |||
cent concentration of carbon dioxide is adequate and well tolerated if administered at intervals." "Oxygen | |||
has been shown to be an antiexpectorant and has effects opposite to those of carbon" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Oxygen tends to displace carbon dioxide from tissue, and is a source of free radicals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the best-known free radical scavenging substances that has been widely used as a drug is iodide. It | |||
has been used to treat asthma, parasites, syphilis, cancer, Graves" disease, periodontal disease, and | |||
arteriosclerosis. Diseases that produce tissue overgrowth associated with inflammation--granulomas--have | |||
been treated with iodides, and although the iodide doesn"t necessarily kill the germ, it does help to break | |||
down and remove the granuloma. Leprosy and syphilis were among the diseases involving granulomas* that were | |||
treated in this way. In the case of tuberculosis, it has been suggested that iodides combine with | |||
unsaturated fatty acids which inhibit proteolytic enzymes, and thus allow for the removal of the abnormal | |||
tissue. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In experimental animals, iodide clearly delays the appearance of cataracts. (Buchberger, et al., 199l.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Inflammation, edema, and free radical production are closely linked, and are produced by most things that | |||
interfere with energy production. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endotoxin, produced by bacteria, mainly in the intestine, disrupts energy production, and promotes | |||
maladaptive inflammation. The wide spectrum of benefit that iodide has, especially in diseases with an | |||
inflammatory component, suggests first that it protects tissue by blocking free radical damage, but it also | |||
suggests the possibility that it might specifically protect against endotoxin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are subtler differences in transparence that probably have a variety of causes, but differences in | |||
water content or hydration might be involved in the lower transparency that has been seen in women's lenses. | |||
Estrogen, which tends to produce edema and hypotonic body fluids, also increases prolactin production. | |||
Prolactin is involved in water and electrolyte regulation, and it has been found to <strong>accelerate the | |||
development of experimental cataracts.</strong> (M. C. Ng, et al, 1987.) These hormones are associated | |||
with the calcification of soft tissues, and cataracts contain very high levels of calcium. (Avarachan and | |||
Rawal, 1987; Hightower and Reddy, 1982.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen is strongly associated with free radical processes, calcium mobilization, and acetylcholine | |||
release, all of which are involved in the process of excitoxicity. Alvarez, et al., (1996) have shown a | |||
possible involvement of acetylcholine in calcium mobilization in the lens. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin is another regulatory substance strongly associated with prolactin and estrogen, and it also can | |||
be involved in disrupting the metabolism of the lens. This is one of the potential dangers in using | |||
supplemental tryptophan. (Candia, et al., 1980.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Old age commonly involves some changes in the color of tissues--loss of pigment from hair and skin, with | |||
appearance of new pigment (age pigment, lipofuscin), which may appear as "liver spots." But there is also a | |||
tendency of the toenails, fingernails, teeth, and lenses to turn yellow or brown. Some of this dark material | |||
seems to be age pigment, derived from unsaturated fatty acids, but other components have been identified, | |||
for example, tryptophan from damaged proteins. The Maillard reaction (similar to the browning that occurs in | |||
bread crust) has often been mentioned in relation to aging, and involves the combination of protein amino | |||
groups with sugars. But the browning of the lens tends to be associated with the general age related drying | |||
of the lens, it isn"t irregularly distributed, and it doesn"t significantly harm vision. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When I first heard about the age-related browning of the lens, I thought that the experience of colors would | |||
be affected, so I devised a test in which the relative darkness of blue and yellow could be judged in | |||
comparison with a graded strip of shades of grey. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
After people of ages ranging from 10 to 80 had given exactly the same matches, I realized that the nervous | |||
system probably corrects for the "yellow filter" effect of the brown lens. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The browning of tissues will be the subject of another newsletter. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Among the interesting causes of cataracts<strong>: </strong> | |||
Tamoxifen and hypotonic fluids, sodium deficiency<strong>;</strong> toxicity of tryptophan<strong>;</strong> | |||
oxidants (metals, hydrogen peroxide, PUFA); diabetes, photosensitizers and sunlight<strong>; </strong> | |||
excess calcium, deficient magnesium. Excess cortisol. Radiation. Arachidonic and linoleic acids in other | |||
situations have been found to block cells' regulation of their water content. Hypothyroidism tends to | |||
increase the activity of serotonin, estrogen, prolactin, calcium, and the tendency of tissues to retain | |||
water, and to decrease the level of ATP. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Among the factors that probably have a role in preventing cataracts<strong>: </strong> | |||
Thyroid, progesterone, pregnenolone, vitamin E, iodide, pyruvate. Increasing the carbon dioxide lowers the | |||
cell"s pH, and tends to resist swelling. Palmitic acid (a saturated fat that can be synthesized by our | |||
tissues) is normally oxidized by the lens. Calcium blockers experimentally prevent cataracts, suggesting | |||
that magnesium and thyroid (which also act to exclude calcium from cells) would have the same effect. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Thyroid hormone is essential for maintaining adequate carbon dioxide production, for minimizing lactic acid, | |||
cortisol and prolactin, for regulating calcium and magnesium, for avoiding hypotonicity of the body fluids, | |||
and for improving the ratio of palmitic acid to linoleic acid. | |||
</p> | |||
<p>.</p> | |||
<p><strong> </strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong> </strong> | |||
<strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Inhibition of ionic transport and ATPase activities by serotonin analogues in the isolated toad lens," | |||
Candia OA; Lanzetta PA; Alvarez LJ; Gaines W, Biochim Biophys Acta (602)2, 389-400, 1980. "Tryptamine, | |||
5-methyltryptamine and 5-methoxytryptamine had dual effects: 1 mM in the posterior bathing solution | |||
depressed the potential difference of the posterior face of the lens, which resulted in an increase in the | |||
translenticular potential difference and short-circuit current; 1 mM in the anterior solution (in contact | |||
with the lens epithelium) produced a quick and pronounced reduction of the potential difference of the | |||
anterior face. This resulted in a 90-100% decline of the translenticular short-circuit current. Serotonin | |||
and tryptamine were then tested for their effect on the ATPases of lens epithelium. Both amines inhibited | |||
the enzymes with tryptamine at 5 mM completely inhibiting all ATPase activity. <strong>Since tryptophan is | |||
transported from the aqueous humor into the lens and may be converted by lens enzymes to serotonin and | |||
tryptamine, these findings may have physiological implications in cataractogenesis."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Effects of Ca2+ on rabbit translens short-circuit current: evidence for a Ca2+ inhibitable K+ conductance," | |||
Alvarez LJ; Candia OA; Zamudio AC, Curr Eye Res, 1996 Dec, 15:12, 1198-207. PURPOSE: To characterize the | |||
effects of medium Ca2+ levels on rabbit lens electrical properties. Overall, these results suggest that | |||
<strong>lens Ca2(+)-mobilizing agents (e.g. acetylcholine)</strong> could trigger the inhibition of | |||
epithelial K+ conductance(s) by the direct action of Ca2+ on K+ channels." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Effects of Ca2+ on rabbit translens short-circuit current: evidence for a Ca2+ inhibitable K+ conductance," | |||
Alvarez LJ; Candia OA; Zamudio AC, Curr Eye Res, 1996 Dec, 15:12, 1198-207. "PURPOSE: To characterize the | |||
effects of medium Ca2+ levels on rabbit lens electrical properties. Overall, these results suggest that lens | |||
Ca2(+)-mobilizing agents (e.g. acetylcholine) could trigger the inhibition of epithelial K+ conductance(s) | |||
by the direct action of Ca2+ on K+ channels." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"D600 increases the resistance associated with the equatorial potassium current of the lens," Walsh SP; | |||
Patterson JW, Exp Eye Res, 1992 Jul, 55:1, 81-5 "This effect is similar to that produced by quinine and by a | |||
calcium-free medium, and is attributed to the prevention of an increase in the calcium-dependent conductance | |||
produced by pCMPS." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Effects of hydrogen peroxide oxidation and calcium channel blockers on the equatorial potassium current of | |||
the frog lens," Walsh SP; Patterson JW, Exp Eye Res, 1994 Mar, 58:3, 257-65. "Hydrogen peroxide, in | |||
concentrations of 10-1000 microM, produces two major changes in the current-voltage relationships associated | |||
with the equatorial potassium current of the lens. First, the resting and reversal potentials become more | |||
negative than they were prior to treatment with hydrogen peroxide and second, the membrane resistance | |||
related to the equatorial current is decreased. The shift in the resting and reversal potentials is in the | |||
opposite direction from that produced by ouabain. Based on the Nernst equation, the shift in the reversal | |||
potential suggests that there is an <strong>increase in the concentration of potassium in the lens. The 86Rb | |||
uptake and efflux are increased. These observations suggest that hydrogen peroxide stimulates the | |||
Na,K-pump. The decrease in membrane resistance is inhibited by 100 microM of quinine, a | |||
calcium-dependent potassium channel blocker, and does not decrease in a calcium-free medium. This | |||
suggests that the decrease in resistance may be secondary to an increase in lenticular calcium.</strong> | |||
These effects of hydrogen peroxide are similar to those of p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonate (pCMPS), a nearly | |||
impermeant sulfhydryl binding agent,<strong> | |||
and suggest that permeant hydrogen peroxide may increase calcium influx by acting on sulfhydryl groups | |||
on the outer surface of lens membranes. Verapamil, a calcium channel blocker, is reported to prevent | |||
cataract formation.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Effect of prolactin on galactose cataractogenesis," Ng MC; Tsui JY; Merola LO; Unakar NJ phthalmic Res | |||
19:2, 82-94, 1987. "Prolactin has been known to affect the water and electrolyte balance. Because increased | |||
lens hydration has been shown to be a common phenomenon in most, if not all types of cataracts, we have been | |||
interested in investigating a possible role of prolactin in sugar cataract induction and progression. For | |||
this study, we have used morphological and biochemical approaches. The prolactin delivery method involved | |||
intraperitoneal implantation of one or more pellets in Sprague-Dawley female rats. Following implantation of | |||
the desired number of prolactin or control (nonprolactin) pellets, animals were either fed galactose and lab | |||
chow, or lab chow diet. Gross morphological observations of whole lenses, slit-lamp examination of lenses | |||
and light microscopic analysis of lens sections showed that in the galactose-fed prolactin group, galactose | |||
associated alteration progressed faster and total opacification (mature cataract development) was achieved | |||
earlier than in the nonprolactin group. The levels of galactose and dulcitol were higher in the lenses of | |||
galactose-fed prolactin treated rats as compared to lenses from nonprolactin (control) rats. No significant | |||
difference in lens Na+-K+ ATPase activity between the prolactin and nonprolactin group was observed. Our | |||
results indicate that prolactin accelerates galactose-induced cataractogenesis in rats." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"A hypothetical mechanism for toxic cataract due to oxidative damage to the lens epithelial membrane," | |||
Bender CJ Med Hypotheses, 1994 Nov, 43:5, 307-11 Lenticular opacities can be induced by numerous external | |||
agents that <strong>coincide with those that catalyze oxidative damage to lipids. | |||
</strong>One of the consequences of lipid peroxidation is that the affected membrane is rendered more | |||
permeable to protons. A proton leak in the tight epithelium of lens <strong>would uncouple the | |||
Na+/K(+)-ATPases that regulate the water</strong> and ionic content of the bounded tissue. Once | |||
regulatory control of the osmotic pressure is lost, <strong> | |||
the phase state of the</strong> cell's soluble proteins would change, <strong> | |||
leading to refractive changes or, in extreme cases, precipitation</strong>. The same does not occur in | |||
cornea because the stroma is an extracellular polymer blend rather than solution of soluble polymers. | |||
Polymeric phase transitions in the cornea require that divalent cations pass the epithelial membrane, which | |||
can occur only through the action of ionophores. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Tsubota K; Laing RA; Kenyon KR Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1987 May, 28:5, 785-9, <strong>Abnormalities in | |||
glucose metabolism are thought to be among the main causes of cataract formation. | |||
</strong> | |||
The authors have made noninvasive biochemical measurements of the lens that provide information concerning | |||
glucose metabolism in the lens epithelium. The autofluorescence of reduced pyridine nucleotides (PN) and | |||
oxidized flavoproteins (Fp) within the rabbit lens were noninvasively measured as a function of depth using | |||
redox fluorometry. The peak of the autofluorescence at 440 nm (excited at 360 nm) and 540 nm <strong | |||
>(excited at 460 nm) were determined at the lens epithelium. When 8 mM sodium pentobarbital, a known | |||
inhibitor of mitochondrial respiration, was applied to the lens, the autofluorescence peak at 440 nm | |||
increased and that at 540 | |||
</strong> | |||
<strong>nm decreased. The 440 nm autofluorescence is thought to be from | |||
</strong> | |||
reduced pyridine nucleotides, whereas the 540 nm autofluorescence is from the oxidized flavoprotein. | |||
Blocking lens respiration with pentobarbital caused an increase in the PN/Fp ratio by a factor of 3 within | |||
3.5 hr after pentobarbital application." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
[Use of pyrimidine bases and ATP for conservative treatment of early cataracts] Larionov LN Oftalmol Zh, | |||
1977, 32:3, 221-2 | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<strong> | |||
high levels of L-lactate and high ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous</strong>. 2. | |||
Immature cataractous lenses with anterior capsular/subcapsular opacity; intermediate levels of RTP, | |||
intermediate values for the sums of RTP, RDP, and AMP, <strong>high L-lactate levels, and intermediate | |||
values of the ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sulochana KN; Ramakrishnan S; Vasanthi SB; Madhavan HN; Arunagiri K; Punitham R, "First report of congenital | |||
or infantile cataract in deranged proteoglycan metabolism with released xylose," Br J Ophthalmol, 1997 Apr, | |||
81:4, 319-23." "Of 220 children of both sexes below 12 years of age, with congenital or infantile cataract | |||
treated in Sankara Nethralaya, Madras, India, during a period of 2 years, 145 excreted fragments of GAG | |||
(heparan and chondroitin sulphates) in their urine. There was no such excretion among the control group of | |||
50 children. <strong> | |||
The same was found accumulated in the blood and lenses of affected children.</strong> | |||
In addition, xylose was present in small amounts in the urine and blood and xylitol was present in the lens. | |||
There was a significant elevation in the <strong>activity of beta glucuronidase in lymphocytes and | |||
urine,</strong> | |||
when compared with normals. All the above findings suggest deranged proteoglycan metabolism. As the urine | |||
contained mostly GAG fragments and very little xylose, Benedict's reagent was not reduced. This ruled out | |||
galactosaemia.CONCLUSION: An increase of <strong>beta glucuronidase activity might have caused extensive | |||
fragmentation of GAG</strong> with resultant accumulation in the blood and lens and excretion in urine. | |||
Small amounts of xylose may have come from xylose links between GAG and core protein of proteoglycans. Owing | |||
to their polyanionic nature, GAG fragments in the lens might abstract sodium, and with it water, thereby | |||
increasing the hydration of the lens. Excessive hydration and the osmotic effect of xylitol from xylose | |||
might cause cataract. While corneal clouding has been reported in inborn acid mucopolysaccharidosis, | |||
congenital or infantile cataract with deranged metabolism of proteoglycans (acid | |||
mucopolysaccharide-xylose-protein complex) is reported in children for the first time." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"State of electrolytes, osmotic balance and the activity of ATPase in the lenses of selenite--induced | |||
cataracts," Avarachan PJ; Rawal UM Indian J Ophthalmol, 1987, 35:5-6, 210-3. "Selenite-cataracts | |||
incorporated many morphological characteristics observed in human senile catracts. Progressive elevation of | |||
sodium, marked loss of potassium, <strong>several fold increment of calcium; considerable loss of magnesium | |||
levels,</strong> | |||
a dose-response reduction of total-ATPase activity <strong>and significant hydration are the important | |||
features</strong> observed in the lens during the progressive treatment of selenite. The | |||
sodium-potassium imbalance is found to be a secondary effect during the development of cataract and is | |||
suggested to bring about by <strong>an abnormal accumulation of calcium ions</strong> and inactivation of | |||
transport enzyme. The calcium activated proteases could be the promoting factor for the proteolysis and | |||
insolubilization of lens proteins in the inducement of selenite cataract. The impact of selenite on the SH | |||
containing ATPase anzymes could be the cause of impairment in energy metabolism, derangement of electrolytes | |||
and osmotic imbalance which, in turn, accelerate the cortical involvement of lens opacities." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Glucose metabolism by human cataracts in culture," Wolfe JK; Chylack LT Jr Exp Eye Res 43:2, 243-9, 1986. | |||
"Metabolism in human senile cataracts has been studied using uniformly labeled [14C]glucose. Intracapsularly | |||
extracted lenses were cultured in TC-199 media with a glucose concentration of 5.5 mM. Results show that | |||
lactate production accounts for 97% of the glucose metabolized. Under these standard incubation conditions | |||
there is negligible accumulation of alpha-glycerol phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, and sorbitol. The rate of | |||
lactate production was found to be relatively uniform over a range of cataract severities which were | |||
determined from the CCRG classification. The effects of several perturbants in the medium were | |||
measured.<strong> | |||
An ATP concentration of 3 mM was found to inhibit lactate production." | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
M. V. Riley, et al., "The roles of bicarbonate and CO2 in transendothelial fluid movement and control of | |||
corneal thickness," Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 36(1), 103-112, 1995. <strong>"The equilibrium thickness | |||
of deepithelialized corneas swollen with HCO-/CO2 on both surfaces was 35 microns less than that of | |||
corneas swollen in HPO4-." "Normal corneal thickness can be maintained in vitro only in media that | |||
contain HCO3- at concentrations of more than 20 mM."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"The effect of X-irradiation on the sodium-potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase (Na-K-ATPase) | |||
activity in the epithelium of the rat lens. A histochemical and biochemical study," Palva M Acta Ophthalmol | |||
(Copenh), 1978 Jun, 56:3, 431-8. "The epithelial Na-K-ATPase activity of the rat lens was studied after | |||
X-irradiation at intervals of three to ninety days. The enzyme was demonstrated histochemically by light | |||
microscopy and it was measured biochemically by a fluorometric method. Neither histochemical nor biochemical | |||
changes of Na-K-ATPase content of the lens epithelium were observed during the development of cataract. In | |||
whole-mount preparations the enzyme activity was localized in the cell membranes. However, one month after | |||
radiation a few peripheral cells had in addition a precipitated over the whole cell. <strong>The unaltered | |||
Na-K-ATPase</strong> | |||
<strong> | |||
content in the epithelium</strong> suggests that the hydration of the lens after X-irradiation is | |||
primarily caused by <strong>changes in the passive permeability properties of the cell membranes and not by | |||
a decreased capacity of the activity cation pump." | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
McNamara NA; Polse KA; Bonanno JA<strong> "Stromal acidosis modulates corneal swelling." </strong> | |||
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1994 Mar, 35:3, 846-50 "PURPOSE. Studies have shown that stromal acidosis reduces | |||
the rate of corneal thickness recovery after induced edema, providing the first human in vivo evidence that | |||
corneal pH can influence corneal hydration control. This finding raises the question of the possible effect | |||
that pH may have on induced corneal swelling. To explore this question, the corneal swelling response to | |||
hypoxia was measured while stromal pH was controlled. METHODS. Corneal edema and stromal acidosis was | |||
induced in ten subjects by passing a mixture of nitrogen and carbon dioxide gas across the eyes through | |||
tight-fitting goggles. <strong>One eye of each subject received 100% N2, whereas the contralateral eye | |||
received a mixture of 95% N2 and 5% CO2. Exposures of 95% N2 + 5% CO2 lower pH on average to 7.16 versus | |||
7.34 for 100% N2 alone.</strong> Before and after 2.5 hours of gas exposure, central corneal thickness | |||
(CCT) was measured. RESULTS. <strong>Eyes exposed to the lower pH environment (eg, N2 + CO2) developed less | |||
change in CCT</strong> compared to the eyes receiving N2 alone. Overall increase in CCT was 29.9 +/- 5.3 | |||
microns for eyes exposed to the 95% N2 + 5% CO2 gas mixture, versus 37.1 +/- 4.8 microns for 100% N2 <strong | |||
>eyes (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS. The corneal swelling response to hypoxia can be reduced by lowering | |||
stromal pH. Because changes in corneal pH alone have not been found to alter steady-state CCT, it is | |||
proposed that pH | |||
</strong> | |||
exerts its effect only under non-steady-state conditions (ie, corneal swelling and deswelling). This | |||
suggests that acidosis may produce changes in the <strong>rate of lactate metabolism</strong> or alter | |||
endothelial hydraulic conductivity." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Buchberger W; Winkler R; Moser M; Rieger G, "Influence of iodide on cataractogenesis in Emory mice," | |||
Ophthalmic Res, 1991, 23:6, 303-8. Cataract development was studied in two groups of Emory mice by | |||
periodical biomicroscopic examinations (beginning at 5 weeks of age) and by a final evaluation of | |||
water-soluble SH groups in the lenses. The experimental group was given 256 micrograms iodide/kg body weight | |||
with the drinking water throughout the study. The untreated control group received tap water. <strong>Iodide | |||
treatment induced a delay of cataract formation...."</strong> "A still significant difference in the | |||
degree of cataract was also found between the two groups at week 47 of age. No difference was found in the | |||
content of water-soluble SH groups. The results are discussed in relation <strong>to the known antioxidant | |||
and .OH-scavenging effect of iodide and to the oxidative changes in the lens occurring during | |||
progression of cataract development.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"[The chemical nature of the fluorescing products accumulating in the lipids of the crystalline lenses of | |||
mice with hereditary cataract]," Shvedova AA; Platonov ES; Polianskii NB; Babizhaev MA; Kagan VE Biull Eksp | |||
Biol Med, 1987 Mar, 103:3, 301-4.<strong> | |||
"The content of diene conjugates (lipid hydroperoxides) was shown to be significantly higher in lipids | |||
extracted from the lenses of mice with hereditary cataract than in the controls. The same holds true for | |||
characteristics of fluorescence of the end-product of lipid peroxidation."</strong> "It was established | |||
that high-molecular weight fluorescent fractions corresponded to lipid components of <strong> | |||
lipofuscin-like pigments.</strong> NMR and mass spectrometry of low-molecular weight fractions suggested | |||
that they contained predominantly products of free radical oxidation of <strong>long chain polyunsaturated | |||
fatty acids (C22:6). "</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Formation of N'-formylkynurenine in proteins from lens and other sources by exposure to sunlight," Pirie A | |||
Biochem J, 1971 Nov, 125:1, 203-8. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Lipid fluorophores of the human crystalline lens with cataract." Babizhayev MA Graefes Arch Clin Exp | |||
Ophthalmol, 1989, 227:4, 384-91 "It has been established that the development of cataract is accompanied by | |||
the formation of various fluorophores in the lipid fraction of the lens. These lipid-fluorescing products | |||
have been separated chromatographically according to polarity and molecular weight. It is shown that the | |||
initial stages of the development of cataract are characterized by the appearance of lipid fluorophores in | |||
the near ultraviolet and violet regions of the spectrum <strong>(excitation maximum 302-330 nm, emission | |||
maximum 411 nm) with low</strong> polarity and a small molecular weight; the maturing of the cataract | |||
is<strong> | |||
characterized by an increase in the intensity of the long-wave fluorescence of the lipids in the | |||
blue-green region (430-480 nm) and by the formation of | |||
</strong> | |||
polymeric high-molecular-weight fluorescing lipid products with high polarity. It has been demonstrated that | |||
the appearance of lipid fluorophores in the <strong>crystalline lens is associated with the free radical | |||
oxidative modification of the phospholipids and fatty acids in cataract." | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Incidence of cataracts in the mobile eye hospitals of Nepal," Brandt F; Malla OK; Pradhan YM; Prasad LN; | |||
Rai NC; Pokharel RP; Lakhe S, Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol, 1982, 218:1, 25-7 The incidence of cataract | |||
in Nepal was determined from data collected in 14 mobile eye hospitals (called 'eye camps'). Of a total of | |||
<strong>12,217</strong> patients examined in the out-patient department (OPD), cataract surgery was | |||
performed on 2,163. The percentage of cataract patients in the OPD was <strong>less in the mountains (13.8%) | |||
than in the Tarai plains (19.8%).</strong> | |||
In the inhabitants of the mountains, the majority of whom belong to the Tibeto-Birman race, <strong | |||
>cataracts appeared at a significantly later age in both males and females compared to the people of the | |||
plains, who are mostly Indo-Aryan.</strong> Cataracts were discovered in both groups at a younger age in | |||
women than in men." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Associations among cataract prevalence, sunlight hours, and altitude in the Himalayas." Brilliant LB; | |||
Grasset NC; Pokhrel RP; Kolstad A; Lepkowski JM; Brilliant GE; Hawks WN; Pararajasegaram R., Am J Epidemiol | |||
118:2, 250-64 1983. "The relationship between cataract prevalence, altitude, and sunlight hours was | |||
investigated in a <strong>large national probability sample survey of 105 sites</strong> in the Himalayan | |||
kingdom of Nepal, December 1980 through April 1981. Cataract of senile or unknown etiology was diagnosed by | |||
ophthalmologists in 873 of <strong>30,565</strong> | |||
<strong>full-time life-long residents</strong> of survey sites. Simultaneously, the altitude of sites was | |||
measured using a standard mountain altimeter. Seasonally adjusted average daily duration of sunlight | |||
exposure for each site was calculated by a method which took into account latitude and obstructions along | |||
the skyline. Age- and sex-standardized <strong>cataract prevalence was 2.7 times higher in sites at an | |||
altitude of 185 meters or less than in sites over 1000 meters. Cataract prevalence was negatively | |||
correlated with altitude</strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"The untenability of the sunlight hypothesis of cataractogenesis</strong>," Harding JJ Doc | |||
Ophthalmol 88:3-4, 345-9, 1994-95. "The excess prevalence of cataract in <strong>third world countries led | |||
early this century to the hypothesis that sunlight causes cataract. The hypothesis, which ignored | |||
differences in diet, culture, poverty and prevalence of other diseases</strong> such as diarrhoea, | |||
received little support until about thirty years ago when biochemical studies were set up to explore the | |||
browning of lens proteins, which is a common feature of cataract on the Indian subcontinent. Initially these | |||
studies were encouraging in that exposure to sunlight caused some changes seen in cataractous lenses, but | |||
eventually the hypothesis was rejected because the first change in the laboratory was the destruction of | |||
tryptophan, <strong>but this was not found in brown cataract lenses.</strong> A brown nuclear cataract could | |||
not be produced artificially in the laboratory using sunlight or UV exposure. Exposure of laboratory animals | |||
has produced lens opacities, but in most experiments the doses required have also caused keratitis, | |||
conjunctivitis, iritis and inflammation. The cornea seems more sensitive than the lens, which is not | |||
surprising, as it gets the first chance to absorb damaging UV. The biochemical rejection of the hypothesis | |||
coincided with the re-start of the epidemiological studies. Most of these are simply latitude studies and | |||
are no more than a repeat of what was available sixty years ago. They do not help to find a cause. <strong | |||
>Two studies showed that cataract was less common at higher altitude in the Himalayas, but unfortunately led | |||
to opposing conclusions</strong>. On the basis of common knowledge that UV exposure was greater at | |||
higher altitude, the first altitude study led to the rejection of the sunlight hypothesis." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Anticataract action of vitamin E: its estimation using an in vitro steroid cataract model," Ohta Y; Okada | |||
H; Majima Y; Ishiguro I Ophthalmic Res, 1996, 28 Suppl 2:, 16-25 "The aim of this study was to estimate the | |||
anticataract action of vitamin E using an in vitro methylprednisolone (MP)-induced cataract model. The same | |||
severity of early cortical cataract was induced in lenses isolated from male Wistar rats aged 6 weeks by | |||
incubation with MP (1.5 mg/ml) in TC-199 medium. The cataractous lenses showed slight increases in lipid | |||
peroxide (LPO) content and Na+/K+ ratio and slight decreases in reduced glutathione (GSH) content and | |||
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAP-DH), a sensitive index of oxidative stress, and | |||
Na+,K(+)-ATPase activities. When the cataractous lenses were further incubated in TC-199 medium with and | |||
without vitamin E (250 micrograms/ml) for 48 h, the progression of cataract was prevented in the vitamin | |||
E-treated lenses, but not in the vitamin E-untreated lenses. The vitamin E-untreated lenses showed a | |||
decrease in vitamin E content and an increase in water content in addition to further increases in LPO | |||
content and Na+/K+ ratio and further decreases in GSH content and GAP-DH and Na+,K(+)-ATPase activities. In | |||
contrast, the changes of these components and enzymes except for GSH were attenuated in the vitamin | |||
E-treated lenses. From these results, it can be estimated that vitamin E prevents in vitro cataractogenesis | |||
in rat lenses treated with MP by protecting the lenses against oxidative damage and loss of membrane | |||
function. " | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Prevention of oxidative damage to rat lens by pyruvate in vitro: possible attenuation in vivo," Varma SD; | |||
Ramachandran S; Devamanoharan PS; Morris SM; Ali AH,.Curr Eye Res, 1995 Aug, 14:8, 643-9 "Studies have been | |||
conducted to assess the possible preventive effect of pyruvate against lens protein oxidation and consequent | |||
denaturation and insolubilization. Rat lens organ culture system was used for these studies. The content of | |||
water insoluble proteins (urea soluble) increased if the lenses were cultured in medium containing hydrogen | |||
peroxide. Incorporation of pyruvate in the medium prevented such insolubilization. The insolubilization was | |||
associated primarily with loss of gamma crystallin fraction of the soluble proteins. PAGE analysis | |||
demonstrated that insolubilization is related to -S-S- bond formation which was preventable by pyruvate. | |||
Since pyruvate is a normal tissue metabolite the findings are considered pathophysiologically significant | |||
against cataract formation. This was apparent by the <strong>prevention of selenite cataract in vivo by | |||
intraperitoneal administration of pyruvate.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Glucocorticoid-induced cataract in chick embryo monitored by Raman spectroscopy," Mizuno A; Nishigori H; | |||
Iwatsuru M Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 30:1, 132-7, 1989. "Glucocorticoid-induced cataract lens in chick | |||
embryo was monitored by laser Raman spectroscopy. The lens opacity that appeared in chick embryo is a | |||
reversible one. Raman spectra show no significant change in the relative content of water or secondary | |||
structure of the proteins upon lens opacification. The intensity ratios of tyrosine doublet bands in Raman | |||
spectra between clear and opaque lens portions are changes. <strong> | |||
This change is reversible, | |||
</strong>and <strong>is interpreted as a protein-water phase separation that occurred during lens | |||
opacification</strong>." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"[NMR study of the state of water in the human lens during cataract development]" Babizhaev MA; Deev AI; | |||
Nikolaev GM, Biofizika 30:4, 671-4,1985. "Water proton spin-spin relaxation times (T2) and the content of | |||
bound, "non-freezable" at -9 degrees C water in both normal human lenses and human lenses of different | |||
stages of cataract progression (cataracta incipiens, nondum matura, mature hypermatura) were measured by NMR | |||
spin echoes method. By the stage of cataracta nondum matura, increase of bound water content and | |||
simultaneous, almost half decrease of the relaxation time (T2), were observed. However, on the following | |||
stages of cataract evaluation (almost mature, mature cataracts) <strong>a gradual decrease of bound water | |||
content is noted, | |||
</strong>but only for the mature cataract stage the water content significantly differs from that of the | |||
normal one. On the stage of hypermature cataract the presence of two unexchanged with each other fractions | |||
of water is found. The obtained data are <strong>explained by lens protein reconstructions during the | |||
cataract progression.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hightower KR; Reddy VN "Ca++-induced cataract." Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1982 Feb, 22:2, 263-7 "Cataracts | |||
in cultured rabbit lenses were produced by elevation of internal calcium. Experimental procedures were | |||
successful in increasing levels of total and bound Ca++, often without significant changes in sodium, | |||
potassium, or water content. Although the excess in calcium was predominantly associated with water-soluble | |||
proteins and was freely diffusible, a significant amount was bound to membranes and cytosol water-insoluble | |||
proteins. Thus, in lenses with a 10-fold increase in total Ca++, the bound Ca++ increased twofold, nearly | |||
35% of which remained fixed to water-insoluble and membrane proteins after exhaustive (72 hr) dialysis. In | |||
contrast, over 95% of the Ca++ in water-soluble protein fractions was removed by dialysis." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
[Use of pyrimidine bases and ATP for conservative treatment of early cataracts] Larionov LN Oftalmol Zh, | |||
1977, 32:3, 221-2. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Noninvasive measurements of pyridine nucleotide and flavoprotein in the lens," Tsubota K; Laing RA; Kenyon | |||
KR Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 28:5, 785-9, 1987. "<strong>Abnormalities in glucose metabolism are thought to | |||
be among the main causes of cataract formation. | |||
</strong> | |||
The authors have made noninvasive biochemical measurements of the lens that provide information concerning | |||
glucose metabolism in the lens epithelium. The autofluorescence of reduced pyridine nucleotides (PN) and | |||
oxidized flavoproteins (Fp) within the rabbit lens were noninvasively measured as a function of depth using | |||
redox fluorometry. The peak of the autofluorescence at 440 nm (excited at 360 nm) and 540 nm <strong | |||
>(excited at 460 nm) were determined at the lens epithelium. When 8 mM sodium pentobarbital, a known | |||
inhibitor of mitochondrial respiration, was applied to the lens, the autofluorescence peak at 440 nm | |||
increased and that at 540 nm decreased. The 440 nm autofluorescence is thought to be from | |||
</strong> | |||
reduced pyridine nucleotides, whereas the 540 nm autofluorescence is from the oxidized flavoprotein. | |||
Blocking lens respiration with pentobarbital caused an increase in the PN/Fp ratio by a factor of 3 within | |||
3.5 hr after pentobarbital application." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<strong> | |||
high levels of L-lactate and high ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous</strong>. 2. | |||
Immature cataractous lenses with anterior capsular/subcapsular opacity; intermediate levels of RTP, | |||
intermediate values for the sums of RTP, RDP, and AMP, <strong>high L-lactate levels, and intermediate | |||
values of the ratios of L-lactate in the lens/L-lactate in the aqueous."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Lipid fluorophores of the human crystalline lens with cataract," Babizhayev MA Graefes Arch Clin Exp | |||
Ophthalmol, 1989, 227:4, 384-91. [Initial stages of cataracts are characterized by the fluorescence of the | |||
products of fatty acid free radical oxidation.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p>© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com</p> | |||
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<p> | |||
<strong> | |||
Tryptophan, serotonin, and aging</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Beginning with the industrial production of glutamic acid (sold as MSG, monosodium glutamate), the public | |||
has been systematically misinformed about the effects of amino acids in the diet. The FDA has been | |||
industry's powerful ally in misleading the public. Despite research that clearly showed that adults | |||
assimilate whole proteins more effectively than free amino acids, much of the public has been led to believe | |||
that "predigested" hydrolized protein and manufactured free amino acids are more easily assimilated than | |||
real proteins, and that they are not toxic. Even if free amino acids could be produced industrially without | |||
introducing toxins and allergens, they wouldn't be appropriate for nutritional use. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although some research shows that babies up to the age of 18 months can assimilate free amino acids, a baby | |||
formula containing hydrolyzed protein was associated with decreased serum albumin, which suggests that it | |||
interfered with protein synthesis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The myth that free amino acids are "natural nutritional substances" has been used to promote the use of many | |||
products besides MSG, including aspartame, chelated minerals, and tryptophan. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although several amino acids can be acutely or chronically toxic, even lethal, when too much is eaten, | |||
tryptophan is the only amino acid that is also carcinogenic. (It can also produce a variety of toxic | |||
metabolites, and it is very susceptible to damage by radiation.) Since tryptophan is the precursor of | |||
serotonin, the amount of tryptophan in the diet can have important effects on the way the organism responds | |||
to stress, and the way it develops, adapts, and ages. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When an inflammatory disease (eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome) was noticed in people using tryptophan tablets | |||
(1989-90), there was an intense campaign to exonerate the tryptophan itself by blaming the reaction on an | |||
impurity in one company's product. But the syndrome didn't occur only in the people who used that company's | |||
product, and similar changes can be produced by a high-tryptophan diet (Gross, et al., 1999). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are people who advocate the use of tryptophan supplementation or other means to increase serotonin in | |||
the tissues as a treatment for the fibromyalgia syndrome, but the evidence increasingly suggests that | |||
excessive serotonin, interfering with muscle mitochondria, is a major factor in the development of that | |||
syndrome. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 1965, Hans Selye showed that the injection of serotonin caused muscular dystrophy. Subsequent studies | |||
suggest that serotonin excess is involved in both muscular and nervous dystrophy or degeneration. (O'Steen, | |||
1967; Narukami, et al., 1991; Hanna and Peat, 1989.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The fatigue produced by "over-training" is probably produced by a tryptophan and serotonin overload, | |||
resulting from catabolism of muscle proteins and stress-induced increases in serotonin. Muscle catabolism | |||
also releases a large amount of cysteine, and cysteine, methionine, and tryptophan suppress thyroid function | |||
(Carvalho, et al., 2000). Stress also liberates free fatty acids from storage, and these fatty acids | |||
increase the uptake of tryptophan into the brain, increasing the formation of serotonin. Since serotonin | |||
increases ACTH and cortisol secretion, the catabolic state tends to be self-perpetuating. This process is | |||
probably a factor influencing the rate of aging, and contributing to the physiological peculiarities of | |||
aging and depression. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Malnutrition, and specifically protein deficiency, produces an inflammatory state that involves extreme | |||
serotonin dominance. Stress or malnutrition prenatally or in infancy leads to extreme serotonin dominance in | |||
adulthood. Other functions of tryptophan are reduced, as more of it is turned into serotonin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Decreasing tryptophan or decreasing serotonin improves learning and alertness, while increased serotonin | |||
impairs learning. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Tryptophan is an essential amino acid for reproduction and growth of the young animal. Most research on the | |||
nutritional requirements for amino acids has been done on farm animals, because of the economic incentive to | |||
find the cheapest way to produce the fastest growth. Farmers aren't interested in the nutritional factors | |||
that would produce the longest-lived pigs. Some research has been done on the amino acid requirements of | |||
rats over a significant part of their short lifespans. In rats and farm animals, the amount of tryptophan | |||
required decreases with time as the rate of growth slows. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In some ways, rats never really mature, since they keep growing for nearly their whole lifespan. Their | |||
growth stops just a short time before they die, which is usually around the age of two or three years. (At | |||
this age, rats' cells still retain approximately the same high water content seen in the cells of a two | |||
year-old child.) They usually become infertile about half-way through their lifespan. If we try to draw | |||
conclusions about amino acid requirements from the rat studies, I think we would want to extrapolate the | |||
curve for the decreasing need for tryptophan, far beyond the point seen during the rat's short life. And | |||
those "requirements" were determined according to the amounts that produced a maximum rate of growth, using | |||
the index of the pig farmers, as if the rats were being studied for possible use as meat. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When rats were fed a diet completely lacking tryptophan for a short period, or a diet containing only one | |||
fourth of the "normal" amount for a more prolonged period, the results were surprising<strong>:</strong> | |||
They kept the ability to reproduce up to the age of 36 months (versus 17 months for the rats on the usual | |||
diet), and both their average longevity and their maximum longevity increased significantly. They looked and | |||
acted like younger rats. (A methionine-poor diet also has dramatic longevity-increasing effects.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
On the tryptophan-poor diet, the amount of serotonin in the brain decreased. When brain serotonin decreases, | |||
the level of testosterone in male animals increases. More than 20 years ago, a chemical | |||
(p-chlorophenylalanine) that inhibits serotonin synthesis was found to tremendously increase libido. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In old age, the amount of serotonin in the brain increases. This undoubtedly is closely related to the | |||
relative inability to turn off cortisol production that is characteristic of old age (Sapolsky and Donnelly, | |||
1985). Hypothyroidism increases the formation of serotonin, as does cortisol (Henley, et al., 1997, 1998; | |||
Neckers and Sze, 1976). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In white hair, the amount of tryptophan is higher than in hair of any other color. Although serotonin and | |||
tryptophan are very important during rapid growth, their presence in senile tissues is probably closely | |||
associated with the processes of decline. The hair loss that occurs in hypothyroidism, postpartum syndrome, | |||
and with the use of drugs such as St. John's wort (which can also cause the "serotonin syndrome") could be | |||
another effect of excess serotonin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin stimulates cell division and tends to increase the formation of connective tissue, so its | |||
formation should be closely regulated once full growth is achieved. It contributes to the age- or | |||
stress-related thickening of blood vessels, and other fibrotic processes that impair organ function. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The metabolic rate (eating more without gaining extra weight) and ability to regulate body temperature are | |||
increased by early tryptophan deprivation. (Ashley and Curzon, 1981; Segall and Timiras, 1975.) The ability | |||
to oxidize sugar is impaired by serotonin, and several drugs with antiserotonin actions are being used to | |||
treat diabetes and its complications, such as hypertension, obesity, and foot ulcers. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
An excess of tryptophan early in life, stress, or malnutrition, activates the system for converting | |||
tryptophan into serotonin, and that tendency persists into adulthood, modifying pituitary function, and | |||
increasing the incidence of pituitary and other cancers. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin's contribution to high blood pressure is well established. It activates the adrenal cortex both | |||
directly and through activation of the pituitary. It stimulates the production of both cortisol and | |||
aldosterone. It also activates aldosterone secretion by way of the renin-angiotensin system. Angiotensin is | |||
an important promoter of inflammation, and contributes to the degeneration of blood vessels with aging and | |||
stress.<strong> It can also promote estrogen production.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the traditional diet, rather than just eating muscle meats, all the animal parts were used. Since | |||
collagen makes up about 50% of the protein in an animal, and is free of tryptophan, this means that people | |||
were getting about half as much tryptophan in proportion to other amino acids when they used foods such as | |||
"head cheese," ox-tails, and chicken feet. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While some of the toxic effects of an excess of individual amino acids have been investigated, and some of | |||
the protective or harmful interactions resulting from changing the ratios of the amino acids have been | |||
observed, the fact that there are about 20 amino acids in our normal diet means that there is an enormous | |||
number of possibilities for harmful or beneficial interactions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The optimal quantity of protein in the diet has traditionally been treated as if it were a matter that could | |||
be resolved just by observing the rate of growth when a certain protein is given in certain quantities, | |||
along with "standard amounts" of calories and other nutrients. This kind of research has been useful to | |||
farmers who want to find the cheapest foods that will produce the biggest animals in the shortest time. But | |||
that kind of research climate has spread a degraded concept of nutrition into the culture at large, | |||
influencing medical ideas of nutrition, the attitudes of consumers, and the policies of governmental | |||
regulatory agencies. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When synthetic amino acids are used to supplement natural proteins, they are usually chosen according to | |||
irrelevant models of the "ideal protein's" composition, and many toxic contaminants are invariably present | |||
in the synthetic free amino acids. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For the present, the important thing is to avoid the use of the least appropriate food products, while | |||
choosing natural foods that have historical, epidemiological, and biochemical justification. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Whey has been promoted as a protein supplement, but it contains a slightly higher proportion of tryptophan | |||
than milk does. Cheese (milk with the whey removed) contains less tryptophan. Some people have been | |||
encouraged to eat only the whites of eggs, "to avoid cholesterol," but the egg albumin is rich in | |||
tryptophan. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The expensive tender cuts of meat contain excessive amounts of cysteine and tryptophan, but bone broth | |||
(gelatin) and the tougher cuts of meat contain more gelatin, which lacks those amino acids. Many fruits are | |||
deficient in tryptophan, yet have very significant quantities of the other amino acids. They also contain | |||
some of the "carbon skeleton" (keto-acid) equivalents of the essential amino acids, which can be converted | |||
to protein in the body. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Serotonin excess produces a broad range of harmful effects<strong>:</strong> Cancer, inflammation, fibrosis, | |||
neurological damage, shock, bronchoconstriction, and hypertension, for example. Increased serotonin impairs | |||
learning, serotonin antagonists improve it. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The simplest, nonessential, amino acid, glycine, has been found to protect against carcinogenesis, | |||
inflammation, fibrosis, neurological damage, shock, asthma, and hypertension. Increased glycine improves | |||
learning (Handlemann, et al., 1989; File, et al., 1999), glycine antagonists usually impair it. Its | |||
antitoxic and cytoprotective actions are remarkable. Collagen, besides being free of tryptophan, contains a | |||
large amount of glycine--32% of its amino acid units, 22% of its weight. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The varied antiinflammatory and protective effects of glycine can be thought of as an antiserotonin action. | |||
For example, serotonin increases the formation of TNF (tumor necrosis factor, also called cachectin), | |||
glycine inhibits it. In some situations, glycine is known to suppress the formation of serotonin.<strong> | |||
Antagonists of serotonin can potentiate glycine's effects</strong> (Chesnoy-Marchais, et al., 2000). | |||
People who ate traditional diets, besides getting a lower concentration of tryptophan, were getting a large | |||
amount of glycine in their gelatin-rich diet. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Gelatin, besides being a good source of glycine, also contains a large amount of proline, which has some | |||
antiexcitatory properties similar to glycine. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If a half-pound of steak is eaten, it would probably be reasonable to have about 20 grams of gelatin at | |||
approximately the same time. Even a higher ratio of gelatin to muscle meat might be preferable. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Carbon dioxide, high altitude, thyroid, progesterone, caffeine, aspirin, and decreased tryptophan | |||
consumption protect against excessive serotonin release. When sodium intake is restricted, there is a sharp | |||
increase in serotonin secretion. This accounts for some of the antiinflammatory and diuretic effects of | |||
increased sodium consumption--increasing sodium lowers both serotonin and adrenalin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The polyunsaturated oils interact closely with serotonin and tryptophan, and the short and medium chain | |||
saturated fatty acids have antihistamine and antiserotonin actions. Serotonin liberates free fatty acids | |||
from the tissues, especially the polyunsaturated fats, and these in turn liberate serotonin from cells such | |||
as the platelets, and liberate tryptophan from serum albumin, increasing its uptake and the formation of | |||
serotonin in the brain. Saturated fats don't liberate serotonin, and some of them, such as capric acid found | |||
in coconut oil, relax blood vessels, while linoleic acid constricts blood vessels and promotes hypertension. | |||
Stress, exercise, and darkness, increase the release of free fatty acids, and so promote the liberation of | |||
tryptophan and formation of serotonin. Increased serum linoleic acid is specifically associated with | |||
serotonin-dependent disorders such as migraine. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Coconut oil, because of its saturated fatty acids of varied chain length, and its low linoleic acid content, | |||
should be considered as part of a protective diet. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the collagen theory of aging, it is argued that changes in the extracellular matrix are responsible for | |||
isolating cells from their environment, reducing the availability of nutrients and oxygen, and reducing | |||
their ability to send and receive the chemical signals that are needed for correct adaptive functioning. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In diabetes, basement membranes are thickened, and in a given volume of tissue there are fewer capillaries. | |||
This effect probably involves excessive serotonin<em> </em> | |||
(Kasho, et al., 1998). Old animals contain a higher proportion of collagen. Old tendons (or tendons that | |||
have been exposed to excessive estrogen, which stimulates the formation of collagen) are more rigid, and | |||
behave almost as if they have been partly cooked. In diseases such as carcinoid, in which very large amounts | |||
of serotonin are released systemically, fibrosis is exaggerated, and may be the direct cause of death. | |||
Radiation and oxygen deprivation also lead to increased tissue fibrosis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In specific fibrotic conditions, such as cirrhosis of the liver, it is known that glycine and saturated fats | |||
can reverse the fibrosis. In fibrosis of the heart, thyroid hormone is sometimes able to reverse the | |||
condition. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
I think these facts imply that excessive tryptophan, estrogen, and polyunsaturated fats contribute | |||
significantly, maybe decisively, to the degenerative changes that occur in aging. Experiments have | |||
separately shown that reducing dietary tryptophan or unsaturated fats can extend the healthy lifespan, and | |||
several antiestrogenic interventions (removal of the pituitary, or supplementing with progesterone) can slow | |||
age-related changes and delay degenerative diseases. Since these factors interact, each tending to promote | |||
the others, and also interact with exogenous toxins, excess iron accumulation, and other stressors, it would | |||
be reasonable to expect greater results when several of the problems are corrected at the same time. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Toxicol Pathol 1998 May-Jun;26(3):395-402. <strong> | |||
Glycine modulates the toxicity of benzyl acetate in F344 rats.</strong> Abdo KM, Wenk ML, Harry GJ, | |||
Mahler J, Goehl TJ, Irwin RD. "These results suggest that the neurodegeneration induced by BA is mediated by | |||
a depletion of the glycine pool and the subsequent excitotoxicity." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Res Clin Stud Headache 1978;6:110-6.<strong> | |||
Role of individual free fatty acids in migraine. | |||
</strong> | |||
Anthony M "Total plasma free fatty acids, platelet serotonin content and plasma stearic, palmitic, oleic and | |||
linoleic acids were estimated in 10 migraine patients before, during and after a migraine attack. Total and | |||
individual plasma free fatty acid levels rose and platelet serotonin content fell in most patients. <strong | |||
>The highest rise was observed in linoleic acid, which is known to be a potent liberator of platelet | |||
serotonin in vitro</strong> and is the only precursor of all prostaglandins in the body. It is suggested | |||
that the rise in plasma levels of<strong> | |||
linoleic acid in migraine could be responsible for the platelet serotonin release observed during the | |||
attack."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Clin Exp Neurol 1978;15:190-6.<strong> | |||
Individual free fatty acids and migraine.</strong> Anthony M Total plasma free fatty acids (FFAs), | |||
platelet serotonin content and plasma stearic, palmitic, oleic and linoleic acids were estimated in 10 | |||
migrainous patients before, during and after a migraine attack. Total and individual plasma FFA levels rose | |||
and platelet serotonin fell in most patients. Comparison of the pre-headache and headache mean values showed | |||
that of the FFAs linoleic acid rises most during headache. <strong>10 non-migrainous controls had platelet | |||
serotonin content estimated before and after the ingestion of 20g linoleic acid. All showed a | |||
significant fall in platelet serotonin in the post-ingestion period. It is shown that linoleic acid | |||
releases platelet serotonin in vitro, and this study suggests that it has the same action in | |||
vivo.</strong> Further, it is the precursor of all prostaglandins in the body and its marked elevation | |||
during migraine may serve as a source of increased prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) synthesis. It is<strong> | |||
suggested that linoleic acid plays an important role in the biochemical process of the migraine attack, | |||
acting both as a serotonin releasing factor and a source</strong> of PGF1, the vasodilating action of | |||
which can aggravate the clinical symptoms of migraine. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Appl Physiol 1993 Jun;74(6):3006-12. <strong> | |||
Neuroendocrine and substrate responses to altered brain 5-HT activity during prolonged exercise to | |||
fatigue.</strong> Bailey SP, Davis JM, Ahlborn EN. "Pharmacological manipulation of brain serotonergic | |||
[5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] activity affects run time to exhaustion in the rat. These effects may be | |||
mediated by neurochemical, hormonal, or substrate mechanisms. Groups of rats were decapitated during rest, | |||
after 1 h of treadmill running (20 m/min, 5% grade), and at exhaustion. Immediately before exercise rats | |||
were injected intraperitoneally with 1 mg/kg of quipazine dimaleate (QD; a 5-HT agonist), 1.5 mg/kg of LY | |||
53857 (LY; a 5-HT antagonist), or the vehicle (V; 0.9% saline). LY increased and QD decreased time to | |||
exhaustion (approximately 28 and 32%, respectively; P < 0.05)." "Brain 5-HT and 5-hydroxyindole-3-acetic | |||
acid<strong> | |||
concentrations were higher at 1 h of exercise than at rest (P < 0.05), and the latter increased even | |||
further at fatigue in the midbrain and striatum (P <</strong> | |||
0.05)." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Neurochem Int 1993 Sep;23(3):269-83. <strong> | |||
Glutamate, GABA, glycine and taurine modulate serotonin synthesis and release in rostral and caudal | |||
rhombencephalic raphe cells in primary cultures.</strong> Becquet D, Hery M, Francois-Bellan AM, Giraud | |||
P, Deprez P, Faudon M, Fache MP, Hery F. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Acta Physiol Scand 2001 Oct;173(2):223-30. <strong> | |||
Exercise-induced changes in brain glucose and serotonin revealed by microdialysis in rat hippocampus: | |||
effect of glucose supplementation.</strong> | |||
Bequet F, Gomez-Merino D, Berthelot M, Guezennec CY. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Amino Acids 2001;20(1):25-34. <strong>Amino acids and central fatigue.</strong> Blomstrand E. "There is an | |||
increasing interest in the mechanisms behind central fatigue, particularly in relation to changes in brain | |||
monoamine metabolism and the influence of specific amino acids on fatigue." <strong>"When the 5-HT level was | |||
elevated in this way the performance was impaired in both rats and human subjects, and in accordance | |||
with this a decrease in the 5-HT level caused an improvement in running performance in rats. The | |||
precursor of 5-HT is the amino acid tryptophan and the synthesis of 5-HT in the brain is thought to be | |||
regulated by the blood</strong> supply of free tryptophan in relation to other large neutral amino acids | |||
(including the branched-chain amino acids, BCAA) since these compete with tryptophan for transport into the | |||
brain." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Neurol Sci 1988 Apr;84(2-3):239-46. <strong> | |||
Increased platelet aggregation and release reaction in myotonic dystrophy.</strong> | |||
Bornstein NM, Zahavi M, Korczyn AD, Zahavi J. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Curr Med Chem 2001 Sep;8(11):1257-74. <strong> | |||
The inhibitory neural circuitry as target of antiepileptic drugs.</strong> | |||
Bohme I, Luddens H. "Impairments and defects in the inhibitory neurotransmission in the CNS can contribute | |||
to various seizure disorders, i.e., gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glycine as the main inhibitory | |||
neurotransmitters in the brain play a crucial role in some forms of epilepsy." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Braz J Med Biol Res 2000 Mar;33(3):355-61. <strong> | |||
Thyroid peroxidase activity is inhibited by amino acids.</strong> Carvalho DP, Ferreira AC, Coelho SM, | |||
Moraes JM, Camacho MA, Rosenthal D | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q J Exp Psychol B 2000 Aug;53(3):225-38. <strong> | |||
Rapid visual learning in the rat: effects at the 5-HT1a receptor subtype.</strong> | |||
Cassaday HJ, Simpson EL, Gaffan EA. "<strong>The 5-hydroxytryptamine1a (5-HT1a) receptor agonist | |||
8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino) tetralin (8-OH-DPAT; 0.15 mg/kg) impaired rats' rapid visual learning on | |||
a computerized maze. This treatment also increased decision time (DT) but the learning impairment was | |||
not necessarily a side-effect of slower responding because, in this task, responses made at long DT are | |||
more accurate than those at short DT.</strong>" "Its reversal with WAY-100635 offers support to the | |||
hypothesis that 5-HT1a receptor antagonists could improve cognitive function, under conditions of | |||
pre-existing impairment due to overactive serotonergic inhibition, as is thought to occur in Alzheimer's | |||
disease." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Med Sci Sports Exerc 1997 Jan;29(1):58-62. <strong> | |||
Effects of acute physical exercise on central serotonergic systems.</strong> | |||
"This paper reviews data concerning the effects of acute physical exercise (treadmill running) in trained | |||
rats. Works from the 1980's have established that<strong> | |||
acute running increases brain serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine: 5-HT) synthesis in two ways. | |||
Lipolysis-elicited release of free fatty acids in the blood compartment displaces the binding of the | |||
essential amino acid tryptophan to albumin, thereby increasing the concentration of the so-called "free | |||
tryptophan" portion, and because exercise increases the ratio of circulating free tryptophan to the sum | |||
of the concentrations of the amino acids that compete with tryptophan</strong> for uptake at the | |||
blood-brain barrier level, tryptophan enters markedly in the brain compartment. However, this marked | |||
increase in central tryptophan levels increases only to a low extent brain 5-HT synthesis, as assessed by | |||
the analysis of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels, thereby suggesting that exercise promotes feedback | |||
regulatory mechanisms. Indirect indices of 5-HT functions open the<strong> | |||
possibility that acute exercise-induced increases in 5-HT biosynthesis are associated with (or lead to) | |||
increases in 5-HT release."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Dev Neurosci 1997 Apr;15(2):257-63. <strong> | |||
Postnatal changes of brain monoamine levels in prenatally malnourished and control rats.</strong> Chen | |||
JC, Turiak G, Galler J, Volicer L. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Eur J Pharmacol 2000 Aug 25;402(3):205-13.<strong> | |||
Glycinergic potentiation by some 5-HT(3) receptor antagonists: insight into</strong> | |||
<strong>selectivity.</strong> Chesnoy-Marchais D, Levi S, Acher F. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 1986 Oct;36(2):161-71. <strong> | |||
Influence of low tryptophan diet on survival and organ growth in mice.</strong> | |||
De Marte ML, Enesco HE. Greater survival and reduced growth were found to characterize mice on a tryptophan | |||
deficient diet as compared to fully fed control mice. The 50% survival point was reached by the tryptophan | |||
restricted group at 683 days, and by the control group at 616 days. Measurements of body weight, organ | |||
weight, and DNA level were made at 8, 12, 24, 36, 52 and 78 weeks of age. Both whole body weight and organ | |||
weight of liver, kidney, heart and spleen were about 30% lower in the tryptophan restricted group as | |||
compared to the controls, so that the ratio of organ weight to body weight remained at a constant value for | |||
both groups. There was no significant change in cell number as determined by DNA measurements, as a result | |||
of the tryptophan restriction. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Clin Psychopharmacol 1999 Dec;19(6):506-12. <strong> | |||
Beneficial effects of glycine (bioglycin) on memory and attention in young and middle-aged | |||
adults.</strong> File SE, Fluck E, Fernandes C. ."The effects of Bioglycin(Konapharma, Pratteln, | |||
Switzerland), a biologically active form of the amino acid glycine, were . . . studied in healthy students | |||
(mean age, 20.7 years) and middle-aged men (mean age, 58.9 years) with tests that measured attention, memory | |||
and mood, using a double-blind, randomized, crossover design. Compared with the young group, the middle-aged | |||
group had significantly poorer verbal episodic memory, focused, divided, and sustained attention; they also | |||
differed in their subjective responses at the end of testing. Bioglycin significantly improved retrieval | |||
from episodic memory in both the young and the middle-aged groups, but it did not affect focused or divided | |||
attention. However, the middle-aged men significantly benefited from Bioglycin in the sustained-attention | |||
task. The effects of Bioglycin differed from those of other cognitive enhancers in that it was without | |||
stimulant properties or significant effects on mood, and it primarily improved memory rather than attention. | |||
It is likely to be of benefit in young or older people in situations where high retrieval of information is | |||
needed or when performance is impaired by jet lag, shift work, or disrupted sleep. It may also benefit the | |||
impaired retrieval shown in patients with schizophrenia, Parkinson's disease, and Huntington's disease. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res 1997 Sep 12;768(1-2):43-8.<strong> | |||
Mobilization of arachidonate and docosahexaenoate by stimulation of the 5-HT2A receptor in rat C6 glioma | |||
cells.</strong> Garcia MC, Kim HY Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics, National Institute | |||
on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, MD 20852, USA.<strong> | |||
"In this study, we demonstrate that astroglial 5-HT2A receptors are linked to the mobilization of | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). Stimulation of C6 glioma</strong> cells, prelabeled with | |||
[3H]arachidonate (AA, 20:4n6) and [14C]docosahexaenoate (DHA, 22:6n3), with serotonin and the 5-HT(2A/2C) | |||
receptor agonist (+/-)-2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodoamphetamine hydrochloride (DOI) resulted in the mobilization of | |||
both [3H] and [14C] into the supernatant of the cell monolayers. The increased radioactivity in the | |||
supernatant was mainly associated with free fatty acids." "These results indicate that the 5-HT2A receptor | |||
is coupled to the mobilization of PUFA." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Neurosci Lett 1995 May 5;190(2):143-5.<strong> | |||
Serotonin involvement in the spontaneous alternation ability: a behavioral study in | |||
tryptophan-restricted rats.</strong> Gonzalez-Burgos I, Olvera-Cortes E, Del Angel-Meza AR, | |||
Feria-Velasco A. Laboratorio de Psicobiologia, Centro de Investigacion Biomedica de Occidente, IMSS, | |||
Guadalajara, Jal., Mexico. Spontaneous alternation (SA) is controlled by septal cholinergic terminals in the | |||
hippocampus. Serotoninergic terminals end on cholinergic nerve endings in the hippocampus, and their | |||
possible role in SA was investigated in rats fed with a tryptophan-deficient diet, from weaning to 60 days | |||
of age. <strong>A T-maze was used for the test. At the age of 40 days, an increase in SA occurred in the | |||
tryptophan deficient rats, | |||
</strong> | |||
although this effect disappeared by 60 days of age. A modulatory role of serotonin in the psychoneural | |||
control of SA is suggested, and it may be through presynaptic inhibition of hippocampal cholinergic | |||
terminals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Physiol Behav 1998 Jan;63(2):165-9.<strong> | |||
Effect of tryptophan restriction on short-term memory.</strong> Gonzalez-Burgos I, Perez-Vega MI, Del | |||
Angel-Meza<strong> </strong> | |||
AR, Feria-Velasco A. Centro de Investigacion Biomedica de Michoacan, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, | |||
Morelia. Several brain regions are involved in the learning process that is integrated from sensorial | |||
inputs. It is thereafter consolidated in short- (STM) or long-term memory. Serotonin is strongly related to | |||
both types of memory, and particularly, to STM, however, its regulatory role is still unclear. In this | |||
study, the effects of tryptophan (TRY) restriction on learning and STM were evaluated. Ten Sprague-Dawley | |||
female rats were fed with a TRY-restricted diet (0.15g/100g) starting from postnatal Day 21. At 21, 40, and | |||
60 days of age, 5 trials per animal were carried out in a "hard-floor"-Biel maze, after 24 h of water | |||
abstinence. The number of errors per trial were registered before reaching<strong> </strong> | |||
the goal.<strong> | |||
At both 40 and 60 days, experimental rats committed less errors than controls. Likewise, the | |||
TRY-restricted group learned the task from the second trial on, whereas controls did not solve it until | |||
the third trial. | |||
</strong>TRY restriction, and therefore brain serotonin reduction, could impair normal cholinergic activity | |||
in some areas such as the hippocampus and the cerebral cortex, where involvement in learning and memory is | |||
well documented. Morphological and neurochemical plastic events could also be related to the more efficient | |||
performance of the task by the TRY-restricted rats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Physiol 1997 Jul;273(1 Pt 2):R324-30. <strong> | |||
Mechanisms in the pressor effects of hepatic portal venous fatty acid infusion.</strong> Grekin RJ, | |||
Dumont CJ, Vollmer AP, Watts SW, Webb RC Portal venous infusion of oleate solution has pressor effects. We | |||
have examined efferent mechanisms, measured the response to sustained infusion, and determined the effect of | |||
linoleate. Eight conscious animals received concurrent infusions of prazosin or vehicle with portal venous | |||
infusion of oleate. Oleate alone<strong><hr /></strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<strong><hr /></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Adv Exp Med Biol 1999;467:507-16. <strong> | |||
Tryptophan toxicity--time and dose response in rats.</strong> Gross B, Ronen N, Honigman S, Livne E. | |||
"During the past decade L-tryptophan (Trp) ingestion have been associated with a multisystemic syndrome, | |||
known as eosinophilia myalgia syndrome (EMS). Even though an epidemic studies indicated that a contaminant, | |||
1,1'-ethylidene-bis-L-tryptophan was involved in EMS, <strong>abnormalities in metabolism of Trp have been | |||
reported in other similar clinical syndromes such as carcinoid syndrome, scleroderma or eosinophilic | |||
fasciitis."</strong> | |||
<strong>"Increased amounts of connective tissue</strong> | |||
<strong>and induction of inflammatory cell proliferation were observed in lung, spleen and in gastrocnemia | |||
muscle of rats treated with higher dose of Trp for longer period.</strong> Induction of kynurenine | |||
pathway by injection of p-CPA caused more tissue damage. It is concluded that excessive Trp or elevation of | |||
its metabolites could play a role in amplifying some of pathological features of EMS. This pathological | |||
damage is further augmented by metabolites of the kynurenine pathway." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Zh Nevrol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova 1999;99(2):12-20. <strong>[Neuroprotective effects of glycine in the | |||
acute period of ischemic stroke.]</strong> [Article in Russian] Gusev EI, Skvortsova VI, Komissarova IA, | |||
Dambinova SA, Raevskii KS, Alekseev AA, Bashkatova VG, Kovalenko AV, Kudrin VS, Iakovleva EV. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1989 Dec;34(4):823-8. <strong> | |||
Milacemide, a glycine prodrug, enhances performance of learning tasks in normal and amnestic | |||
rodents.</strong> Handelmann GE, Nevins ME, Mueller LL, Arnolde SM, Cordi AA. "Increasing glycine | |||
concentrations in the brain by administration of a glycine prodrug, milacemide, is shown here to enhance | |||
performance of a shock-motivated passive avoidance task in rats, and to reverse drug-induced amnesia in a | |||
spontaneous alternation paradigm in mice." "These studies indicate a role of glycinergic neurotransmission | |||
in memory processes, and support the therapeutic potential of glycinergic drugs in memory impairment." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pain 1989 Aug;38(2):145-50.<strong> | |||
Ketanserin in reflex sympathetic dystrophy. A double-blind placebo controlled cross-over trial. | |||
</strong>Hanna MH, Peat SJ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Synapse 1997 Sep;27(1):36-44. <strong>Thyroid hormones and the treatment of depression: an examination of | |||
basic hormonal actions in the mature mammalian brain. | |||
</strong> | |||
Henley WN, Koehnle TJ. "The lack of mechanistic insight reflects, in large part,<strong> | |||
a longstanding bias that the mature mammalian central nervous system is not an important target site for | |||
thyroid hormones."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Physiol 1997 Feb;272(2 Pt 2):H894-903. <strong> | |||
Hypothyroid-induced changes in autonomic control have a central serotonergic component. | |||
</strong>Henley WN, Vladic F. Three experiments were conducted in unanesthetized rats made hypothyroid | |||
(Hypo) or maintained as euthyroid controls (Eu) to examine general cardiovascular responsiveness [experiment | |||
I (Exp I)]; responsiveness to a serotonin (5-HT2) agonist, dl-2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodoamphetamine [DOI | |||
intracerebroventricularly; experiment II (Exp II)]; or responsiveness to a 5-HT(1A) agonist | |||
dl-8-hydroxydipropyl-aminotetralin hydrobromide [8-OH-DPAT intracerebroventricularly; experiment III (Exp | |||
III)]. In Exp I, intravenous infusions of phenylephrine and nitroprusside provided little evidence that | |||
findings in Exp II and III were caused by generalized impairment in cardiovascular responsiveness in Hypo. | |||
In Exp II and III, Eu and Hypo were given either intra-arterial atropine or vehicle. Atropine significantly | |||
elevated heart rate (Exp II and III) and mean arterial pressure (Exp II) in Eu only. When compared with Eu, | |||
Hypo had a reduced pressor response (5.2 vs. 20.1%), an attenuated pulse pressure response (19.3 vs. 35.4%), | |||
and a more robust bradycardia (-17.7 vs. -7.0%) in response to DOI. These differences were atropine | |||
sensitive. In Exp III, Hypo had larger decrements in mean arterial pressure (-9.0 vs. -5.1%), heart rate ( | |||
-13.9 vs. - 7.7%), and body temperature (-4.5 vs. -2.7%) in response to 8-OH-DPAT in comparison to Eu. | |||
Parasympathetic involvement in the differential responses to 8-OH-DPAT was less clear than with DOI. | |||
Deranged autonomic control in hypothyroidism may be caused, in part, by changes in central serotonergic | |||
activity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res 1986 Mar;390(2):221-6. <strong> | |||
Brain serotonin synthesis and Na+,K+-ATPase activity are increased postnatally after prenatal | |||
administration of L-tryptophan.</strong> Hernandez-Rodriguez J, Chagoya G. The effect of prenatal | |||
L-tryptophan supplementation on the serotonin (5-HT) synthesis and the activity of Na+,K+-ATPase in the | |||
cerebral cortex was studied during postnatal development, from birth up to day 30. A parallel and<strong> | |||
significant elevation of the serotonin content and the activity of tryptophan-5-hydroxylase was observed | |||
in the brain of infant rats born to mothers treated with L-tryptophan, as related to non-treated | |||
controls. The</strong> activity of Na+,K+-ATPase was also significantly elevated at the different ages | |||
studied throughout the developmental period, as related to controls. These results suggest an important role | |||
of L-tryptophan in the early regulation of the<strong> | |||
serotonin-synthesizing machinery, which lasts postnatally. Elevation of ATPase activity seems to be | |||
associated to the elevation in the activity of the 5-HT system.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res 1977 Mar 4;123(1):137-45. <strong> | |||
Daily variations of various parameters of serotonin metabolism in the rat brain. II. Circadian | |||
variations in serum and cerebral tryptophan levels: lack of correlation with 5-HT turnover.</strong> | |||
Hery F, Chouvet G, Kan JP, Pujol JF, Glowinski J "Significant circadian variations in 5-HT and 5-HIAA levels | |||
were found in cerebral tissues." "Important significant circadian variations in free and total serum | |||
tryptophan levels were also observed. In both cases, the maximal levels were found during the middle of the | |||
dark phase after the peak of 5-HIAA levels." "The diurnal changes in tryptophan content in cerebral tissues | |||
seemed thus related to those found in serum." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Kidney Int 1998 Oct;54(4):1083-92. <strong> | |||
Serotonin enhances the production of type IV collagen by human mesangial cells.</strong> Kasho M, Sakai | |||
M, Sasahara T, Anami Y, Matsumura T, Takemura T, Matsuda H, Kobori S, Shichiri M. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1977 Sep;7(3):245-52. <strong> | |||
Fatty acid and tryptophan changes on disturbing groups of rats and caging them singly.</strong> Knott | |||
PJ, Hutson PH, Curzon G The effects of disturbing groups of 24 hr fasted rats on plasma unesterified fatty | |||
acid (UFA) and tryptophan concentrations and brain tryptophan concentrations were investigated. Removing | |||
rats from cages rapidly increased plasma UFA and corticosterone and decreased plasma and whole blood | |||
tryptophan of cage mates. The disturbance also appeared to influence biochemical values of rats in other | |||
cages within the same chamber. Effects specific to individual cages were also suggested. In subsequent | |||
experiments 24 fasting rats caged together were rapidly transferred to 24 separate cages and killed at | |||
intervals. Plasma UFA rose to a maximum by 12 min and then fell toward initial values. Plasma total | |||
tryptophan concurrently fell then rose. Its percentage in the free (ultrafilterable) state, and in some | |||
experiments the absolute values of free tryptophan rose then fell. When the latter rise was marked <strong | |||
>then brain tryptophan and the 5-HT metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid rose.</strong> Tyrosine changes | |||
were negligible. Thus altered brain tryptophan level and 5-HT metabolism may be associated with plasma | |||
tryptophan changes caused by brief environmental disturbance. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Insect Physiol 2000 May 1;46(5):793-801. <strong> | |||
Effect of an amino acid on feeding preferences and learning behavior in the honey bee, Apis | |||
mellifera.</strong> Kim YS, Smith BH. <strong>"Subjects preferred to feed on a sucrose stimulus that | |||
contained glycine, and the highest relative preference was recorded for the highest concentration of | |||
glycine."</strong> "<strong>All concentrations of glycine enhanced the rate and magnitude of a | |||
conditioned response to an odor . . . ."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Eur J Pharmacol 1981 May 22;71(4):495-8. <strong> | |||
Antagonism of L-glycine to seizures induced by L-kynurenine, quinolinic acid and strychnine in | |||
mice.</strong> Lapin IP. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Circumpolar Health 1998;57 Suppl 1:386-8. <strong>Seasonal variation of the amino acid, L-tryptophan, | |||
in interior Alaska.</strong> Levine ME, Duffy LK. "The seasonal pattern of L-tryptophan was studied in a | |||
Fairbanks, Alaska, population that was unadapted to the extreme light variations of the North. Previously, | |||
this population was shown to exhibit seasonal behavior effects such as increases in fatigue and sleep | |||
duration, as well as endocrine effects such as increases in melatonin levels and phase shifting." "Prominent | |||
results included finding increased levels in the winter at several different diurnal time points. These | |||
findings support hypotheses which relate underlying physiological adaptations to the North to the increased | |||
incidence of behavioral disorders such as depression and alcoholism." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Infect Immun 2001 Sep;69(9):5883-91. <strong> | |||
Dietary glycine prevents peptidoglycan polysaccharide-induced reactive arthritis in the rat: role for | |||
glycine-gated chloride channel.</strong> Li X, Bradford BU, Wheeler MD, Stimpson SA, Pink HM, Brodie TA, | |||
Schwab JH, Thurman RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Neurol Sci 1989 Jan;89(1):27-35. <strong> | |||
Polyamine biosynthetic decarboxylases in muscles of rats with different experimental myopathies.</strong | |||
> Lorenzini EC, Colombo B, Ferioli ME, Scalabrino G, Canal N. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Dev Neurosci 1996 Aug;14(5):641-8. <strong> | |||
Nutritional recovery does not reverse the activation of brain serotonin synthesis in the ontogenetically | |||
malnourished rat.</strong> Manjarrez GG, Magdaleno VM, Chagoya G, Hernandez J Coordinacion de | |||
Investigacion Biomedica del Centro Medico Nacional, I.M.S.S. Mexico, D.F. In the present work we confirm | |||
that gestational malnutrition effects body and brain composition and results in an activation of the | |||
synthesis of the brain neurotransmitter 5-hydroxytryptamine. These results also demonstrate more activity of | |||
the rate-limiting enzyme tryptophan hydroxylase in the malnourished fetal and postnatal brain. However, the | |||
activity of this enzyme remains increased in the brain of nutritionally recovered animals accompanied by an | |||
increase in the synthesis of 5-hydroxytryptamine. We therefore suggest that, in the nutritionally recovered | |||
animal, the mechanism of activation of this biosynthetic path in the brain may be not dependent on the | |||
increased<strong> | |||
availability of free L-tryptophan observed in malnourished animals, but might be due to a specific | |||
change in the enzyme complex itself. This hypothesis is</strong> supported by the fact that plasma free | |||
and brain L-tryptophan return to normal in the recovered animal. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res 1997 Nov 7;774(1-2):265-8. <strong> | |||
Tryptophan ingestion by gestant mothers alters prolactin and luteinizing hormone release in the adult | |||
male offspring.</strong> Martin L, Rodriguez Diaz M, Santana-Herrera C, Milena A, Santana C. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rev Esp Fisiol 1984 Jun;40(2):213-9.<strong> | |||
[Lipolytic effect of serotonin in vitro].</strong> [Article in Spanish] Martinez-Conde A, Mayor de la | |||
Torre P, Tamarit-Torres J The lipolytic action of serotonin on isolated adipocytes from the adipose tissue | |||
of rats has been studied. The adipocytes were incubated in serotonin 10(-6) M. Changes both in concentration | |||
and composition of the free intra and extracellular fatty acids as well as diacylglycerides through liquid | |||
gas chromatography were evaluated at different intervals. A lower concentration of<strong> | |||
free fatty acids and diacylglycerides is produced during the first minutes of incubation as well as a | |||
subsequent increase in the concentration of both, which becomes greatest after 20-30 minutes. The | |||
composition of both lipidic fractions</strong> (FFA and DAG) into fatty acids at 5, 10, 20 and 30 | |||
minutes, is related to the composition of the triacylglycerides (TAG), since during the | |||
esterification<strong> | |||
process a decline in the DAG of linoleic and palmitoleic acid is observed, both acids arranging | |||
themselves preferably in the TAG 2 position. Whereas the inverse process occurs during lipolysis; i.e. | |||
an increase in the proportion of the acids</strong> | |||
in the 2 position. In the FFA fraction, a higher proportion of fatty acids, preferential by arranged in | |||
positions 1 + 3 of the TAG's is observed. Similarly a decrease is observed in the extracellular | |||
concentration of FFA in the presence of serotonin with respect to the controls, a fact which has been | |||
described by other authors. An analysis of the present data leads us to revise the possible<strong> | |||
role of "Cahill's cycle" (simultaneous activation of the DAG-acyl-transferase and the HSL-TAG-lipase) in | |||
the action of serotonin and other hormones.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nahrung 1991;35(9):961-7. <strong>[The effect of different protein diets on longevity and various | |||
biochemical parameters of aged rats].</strong> Medovar BJa, Petzke KJ, Semesko TG, Albrecht V, Grigorov | |||
JuG Institut fur Gerontologie, AMW, UdSSR, Kiev. In this work 23 month old rats were fed for 200 days with | |||
different protein diets (NT-diet: 19% protein, 72% of animal origin and LP-diet: 8.8% protein exclusively of | |||
vegetable origin). Some metabolic parameters and lifespan (on the base of a 50% death-rate) were determined. | |||
The relations of the liver free amino<strong> | |||
acids glycine + alanine and tyrosine + phenylalanine + branched chain amino acids and the ratio of | |||
phenylalanine/tyrosine were determined to be higher in the LP-group.</strong> Phenylalanine in liver and | |||
urea concentrations in liver and serum were lower in the LP-group. Furthermore the dopamine or serotonin | |||
levels were significantly lower in lateral and medial or lateral regions of the hypothalamus respectively in | |||
LP-diet fed rats. The norepinephrine content was not modified by<strong> | |||
the diets. The median lifespan of 23 month old rats was higher by 24% following LP-treatment. These | |||
results suggest that the protein component (amino acids) of</strong> different diets may modify | |||
metabolic parameters and lifespan of animals by mechanisms in which the central regulation may be involved. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Neurol Sci 1976 May;28(1):41-56. <strong> | |||
Skeletal muscle necrosis following membrane-active drugs plus serotonin.</strong> | |||
Meltzer HY. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res Bull 1977 Sep-Oct;2(5):347-53.<strong> | |||
Effects of developmental protein malnutrition on tryptophan utilization in brain and peripheral | |||
tissues.</strong> Miller M, Leahy JP, McConville F, Morgane PJ, Resnick O. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Exp Neurol 1977 Oct;57(1):142-57. <strong> | |||
Tryptophan availability: relation to elevated brain serotonin in developmentally protein-malnourished | |||
rats.</strong> Miller M, Leahy JP, Stern WC, Morgane PJ, Resnick O. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Synapse 1990;6(4):338-43. <strong>Age-related changes of strychnine-insensitive glycine receptors in rat | |||
brain as studied by in vitro autoradiography</strong>. Miyoshi R, Kito S, Doudou N, Nomoto T. | |||
"3H-glycine binding sites were most concentrated in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex, and olfactory | |||
tubercle, and moderate densities of binding sites were located in the striatum, nucleus accumbens, amygdala, | |||
and certain thalamic nuclei." <strong>"In aged animals, severe decline of 3H-glycine binding sites was | |||
observed in the telencephalic regions including the hippocampus and cerebral cortex." "These results | |||
suggest that the decrease of glycine receptors in particular brain regions has some relation with | |||
changes of neuronal functions associated with aging process in these areas.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Enzyme 1976;21(6):481-7. <strong>Inhibition of actomyosin ATPase by high concentrations of | |||
5-hydroxytryptamine. Possible basis of lesion in 5HT-induced experimental myopathy.</strong> Mothersill | |||
C, Heffron JJ, McLoughlin JV. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Brain Res 1975 Jul 25;93(1):123-32. <strong> | |||
Regulation of 5-hydroxytryptamine metabolism in mouse brain by adrenal glucocorticoids.</strong> Neckers | |||
L, Sze PY "A single injection of<strong> | |||
hydrocortisone acetate (HCA; 20 mg/kg, i.p.) accelerated the accumulation of 5-HT in whole brain after | |||
inhibition of monoamine oxidase activity by paragyline. The hormone did not appear to change brain | |||
tryptophan hydroxylase or 5-hydroxytryptophan decarboxylase activity. However, tryptophan levels in | |||
brain were elevated by 50% within 1 h after treatment with HCA."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 1967 Nov;126(2):579-83. <strong> | |||
Serotonin antagonist increases longevity in mice with hereditary muscular dystrophy.</strong> O'Steen | |||
WK. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 1988 Apr;43(1):79-98. <strong> | |||
Histology and survival in age-delayed low-tryptophan-fed rats. Ooka H, Segall PE, Timiras PS.</strong> | |||
Diets containing tryptophan in concentrations 30 and 40 percent of those fed to controls from weaning to | |||
24-30 months or more, can delay aging in Long-Evans female rats. Mortality among low-tryptophan-fed rats was | |||
greater in the juvenile period, but substantially less than controls at late ages. Histological biomarkers | |||
of aging were also delayed after tryptophan restriction in some organs (liver, heart, uterus, ovary, adrenal | |||
and spleen) but not in others (kidney, lung, aorta). Brain serotonin levels were low in tryptophan-deficient | |||
rats but showed remarkable capacity for rehabilitation. Effects on early and late mortality and brain levels | |||
of serotonin were proportional to the severity of the restriction. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Age Ageing 1985 Mar;14(2):71-5. <strong> | |||
Plasma tryptophan, age and depression.</strong> Phipps DA, Powell C. Plasma, obtained from 131 | |||
nondepressed, otherwise healthy subjects aged from 17 to 102 years, and 22 depressed subjects aged over 70 | |||
years, was analysed for total and free tryptophan. Variation with age was found in total tryptophan.<strong> | |||
This association has not been described hitherto. There was a significant increase in total tryptophan | |||
and a non-significant increase in free tryptophan with depression. This is in contrast to some studies | |||
in younger people showing a decline in plasma tryptophan in depressed subjects.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bratisl Lek Listy 1975 Jul;64(1):58-63. <strong> | |||
[The effect of serotonin on the release of free fatty acids from human and rat adipose tissue (author's | |||
transl)].</strong> [Article in Czech] Rath R, Kujalova V. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Adv Exp Med Biol 1999;467:497-505. <strong> | |||
Oxidative damage in rat tissue following excessive L-tryptophan and atherogenic diets.</strong> Ronen N, | |||
Livne E, Gross B. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
FASEB J 1994 Dec;8(15):1302-7.<strong> | |||
Methionine restriction increases blood glutathione and longevity in F344 rats.</strong> | |||
Richie JP Jr, Leutzinger Y, Parthasarathy S, Malloy V, Orentreich N, Zimmerman JA "Met restriction resulted | |||
in a 42% increase in mean and 44% increase in maximum life span, and in 43% lower body weight compared to | |||
controls (P < 0.001). Increases in blood GSH levels of 81% and 164% were observed in mature and old | |||
Met-restricted animals, respectively (P < 0.001)." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Carcinogenesis 1999 Nov;20(11):2075-81. <strong> | |||
Dietary glycine prevents the development of liver tumors caused by the peroxisome proliferator | |||
WY-14,643.</strong> Rose ML, Cattley RC, Dunn C, Wong V, Li X, Thurman RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 1983 Nov-Dec; 23(3-4):245-52. <strong> | |||
Low tryptophan diets delay reproductive aging.</strong> Segall PE, Timiras PS, Walton JR. Newly weaned | |||
female rats fed diets severely deficient in the essential amino acid tryptophan show marked delays in | |||
reproductive aging, with conception and delivery occurring as late as 36 months. The rate of aging in these | |||
rats seems inversely related to both their early growth rates and the accessibility of brain tryptophan. The | |||
subsequent age retardation may depend on a reduction in both early cell loss and rate of brain maturation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 1978 Jan;7(1):1-17. <strong> | |||
Neural and endocrine development after chronic tryptophan deficiency in rats: I. Brain monoamine and | |||
pituitary responses.</strong> Segall PE, Ooka H, Rose K, Timiras PS. "Caloric restriction and tryptophan | |||
deficient diets have been shown to delay aging in the immature laboratory rat." "Another group of animals, | |||
in which growth and maturation was delayed by feeding d,1-parachlorophenylalanine (PCPA) showed decreases in | |||
serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine concentrations in all brain regions investigated. All treatments | |||
employed to arrest growth and maturation resulted in pituitary alterations manifested by gross, histological | |||
and ultrastructural changes. It is postulated that there maturation- and age-retarding treatments delay the | |||
development of the central nervous system resulting in postponed maturation of the neuroendocrine axis, with | |||
consequent hypoactivity of certain pituitary functions and a resultant delay in the onset of maturation and | |||
senescence." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Aktuelle Gerontol 1977 Oct;7(10):535-8.<strong> | |||
Long-term tryptophan restriction and aging in the rat.</strong> Segall P. Growth-retarded rats fed a | |||
tryptophan deficient diet at 21 days for periods of<strong> | |||
6-22 months were shown to reach normal body weight when subsequently fed Purina Rat Chow. They | |||
demonstrated an increased ability over similar aged controls to recover from hypothermia induced by | |||
3-minute whole-body ice water immersion,</strong> were able to bear litters at 17--28 months of age, | |||
showed a delay in the age of onset of visible tumors, and indicated an increase in their average lifespan | |||
at<strong> | |||
late ages. Animals fed on this diet from 3 months of age revealed a similar ability to reproduce at | |||
advanced ages, but not as marked as those placed on the diet earlier. The average lifespan (in months | |||
+/- the standard error of the mean) of the rats recovering from the long-term tryptophan-deficient diets | |||
was 36.31 +/- 2.26 while the control rats survived an average of 30.5 +/- 1.90</strong> months. The last | |||
of 8 rats surviving the period of tryptophan-deficiency died at<strong> | |||
45.50 months (1387 days) while the last of 14 control rats died at 41.75 months (1266 days). It is | |||
hypothesized that some kind of subtle mechanism exerts its</strong> influence on the rats during the | |||
period of tryptophan deficiency which caused an accelerated morbidity and mortality as they approached | |||
senescence approximately<strong> | |||
1 to 2 years after refeeding. | |||
</strong>This is parallel to the situation with immature<strong> | |||
animals subjected to long-term caloric restriction and then fed on normal diets.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 1976 Mar-Apr;5(2):109-24. <strong> | |||
Patho-physiologic findings after chronic tryptophan deficiency in rats: a model for delayed growth and | |||
aging.</strong> Segall PE, Timiras PS. Long-Evans female rats three weeks, three months and 13-14 months | |||
of age were placed on tryptophan-deficient diets for periods ranging from a few months to nearly two years. | |||
Growth was interupted during the period of tryptophan-deficiency, but when the animals were returned to a | |||
complete diet, they gained weight and grew to normal size. Ability to reproduce, as indicated<strong> | |||
by litter production, was present at 17-28 months of age in rats which had been deprived of tryptophan, | |||
whereas no controls over 17 months of age produced any offspring. Other signs of delayed aging in the | |||
experimental group included, at advanced ages, greater longevity, as well as later onset in the | |||
appearance of obvious tumors, and better coat condition and hair regrowth. Many of these effects were | |||
also seen in pair-fed controls (fed a diet equal in amount to that</strong> eaten by the | |||
tryptophan-deprived rats, but with 1-tryptophan added). It is hypothesized that tryptophan deficiency delays | |||
growth, development and maturation of the central nervous system (CNS), in particular, by decreasing the | |||
levels of the neurotransmitter serotonin, for which tryptophan is the necessary precursor. In a parallel | |||
experiment, chronic treatment with d, 1-parachlorophenylalanine, an inhibitor of brain serotonin synthesis, | |||
from weaning until adulthood, also inhibited growth (body weight) and delayed sexual maturation (age of | |||
vaginal opening). These observations suggest that diets deficient in tryptophan or restricted in calories | |||
can affect maturation and aging by interfering with CNS protein synthesis, or neurotransmitter metabolism, | |||
or both. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Naturwissenschaften 1965 Sep;52(18):519. <strong> | |||
[Serotonin-caused muscular dystrophy].</strong> [Article in German] Selye H. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Toxicology 1999 Feb 15;132(2-3):139-46. <strong> | |||
Protection against chronic cadmium toxicity by glycine.</strong> Shaikh ZA, Tang W | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 1998 Mar;62(3):580-3. <strong> | |||
Increased conversion ratio of tryptophan to niacin in severe food restriction.</strong> | |||
Shibata K, Kondo T, Miki A. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Monogr Neural Sci 1976;3:94-101.<strong> | |||
Sex, migraine and serotonin interrelationships.</strong> Sicuteri F, Del Bene E, Fonda C. "Sexual | |||
deficiency or frank impotence in man could be due to an imbalance of monoamines, particularly 5-HT, at the | |||
mating center level. An absolute or<strong> | |||
relative excess of 5-HT seems to antagonize testosterone at the level of the mating center receptors in | |||
the brain. Plasma testosterone levels in so-called psychological impotence are normal. When the 5-HT | |||
concentration in sexually deficient men is sufficiently decreased with parachlorophenylalanine | |||
(PCPA)</strong> treatment and testosterone levels increased following its administration, a vivid sexual | |||
stimulation appears in about half of the untractable cases." "Yet the PCPA-MAOI treatment avoids the | |||
prostate carcinogenic risk of testosterone administration in aging males, and seems to have euphorizing | |||
effects stronger than those expected only from MAOI therapy. Because of the several side effects of | |||
PCPA-MAOI testosterone, the present experiments should be interpreted very cautiously." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hepatology 1999 Mar;29(3):737-45.<strong> | |||
Glycine and uridine prevent D-galactosamine hepatotoxicity in the rat: role of Kupffer cells.</strong> | |||
Stachlewitz RF, Seabra V, Bradford B, Bradham CA, Rusyn I, Germolec D, Thurman RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol 1999 Mar;79(4):318-24. <strong>Effect of acute and chronic exercise on | |||
plasma amino acids and prolactin concentrations and on [3H]ketanserin binding to serotonin2A receptors | |||
on human platelets.</strong> Struder HK, Hollmann W, Platen P, Wostmann R, Weicker H, Molderings | |||
GJ.<strong> | |||
"The neurotransmitter serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) has been shown to modulate various | |||
physiological and psychological functions such as fatigue.</strong> Altered regulation of the | |||
serotonergic system has been suggested to play a role in response to exercise stress." "The present results | |||
support the hypothesis that acute endurance exercise may increase 5-HT availability.<strong> | |||
This was reflected in the periphery by increased concentration of the 5-HT precursor free TRP, by | |||
increased plasma PRL concentration, and by a reduction of</strong> 5-HT2A receptors on platelets." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Epilepsy Res 1999 Jan;33(1):11-21.<strong> | |||
Pharmacokinetic analysis and anticonvulsant activity of glycine and glycinamide derivatives.</strong> | |||
Sussan S, Dagan A, Bialer M. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Adv Biochem Psychopharmacol 1976; 15:251-65. <strong> | |||
Glucocorticoid regulation of the serotonergic system of the brain.</strong> | |||
Sze PY. "Glucorticoids at concentrations above 10(-7) M stimulate the uptake of tryptophan by brain | |||
synaptosomes." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Neurobiol Aging 1984 Fall;5(3):235-42. <strong> | |||
Lifetime brain serotonin: regional effects of age and precursor availability.</strong> | |||
Timiras PS, Hudson DB, Segall PE.<strong> | |||
"In the rat, regional brain serotonin levels which do not change from 2-30 months of age are increased | |||
at 36 months." | |||
</strong>"Impaired brain serotonin levels recover moderately but remain lower than controls as late as 36 | |||
months, growth is never completely compensated, and norepinephrine levels show a rebound increase." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Kidney Int 1996 Feb;49(2):449-60. <strong> | |||
Cytoprotection of kidney epithelial cells by compounds that target amino acid gated chloride | |||
channels.</strong> Venkatachalam MA, Weinberg JM, Patel Y, Saikumar P, Dong Z | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 2000 Aug;279(2):L390-8<strong>. Dietary glycine blunts lung inflammatory | |||
cell influx following acute endotoxin.</strong> Wheeler MD, Rose ML, Yamashima S, Enomoto N, Seabra V, | |||
Madren J, Thurman RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Physiol 1999 Nov;277(5 Pt 1):L952-9.<strong> | |||
Production of superoxide and TNF-alpha from alveolar macrophages is blunted by glycine.</strong> Wheeler | |||
MD, Thurman RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Stroke 1991 Apr;22(4):469-76. <strong>Identification of capric acid as a potent vasorelaxant of human | |||
basilar arteries.</strong> | |||
White RP, Ricca GF, el-Bauomy AM, Robertson JT<strong> | |||
"To determine whether naturally occurring fatty acids, especially saturated ones, might act directly as | |||
vasodilators, segments of human basilar arteries and umbilical arteries were precontracted submaximally | |||
with prostaglandin F2 alpha and then exposed to different saturated fatty acids (C4 through C16) | |||
or</strong> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<strong>Caprate also inhibited contractions elicited by KCl, serotonin, and the thromboxane analogue | |||
U46619.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Neurochem Res 1978 Jun;3(3):295-311. <strong> | |||
Adaptive changes induced by high altitude in the development of brain monoamine enzymes.</strong> | |||
Vaccari A, Brotman S, Cimino J, Timiras PS. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Growth Dev Aging 1991 Winter; 55(4):275-83. <strong> | |||
Effect of aging and diet restriction on monoamines and amino acids in cerebral cortex of Fischer-344 | |||
rats.</strong> Yeung JM, Friedman E. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1992 Jul 15;89(14):6443-6. <strong> | |||
Platelet activation by simultaneous actions of diacylglycerol and unsaturated fatty acids.</strong> | |||
Yoshida K, Asaoka Y, Nishizuka Y "Several cis-unsaturated fatty acids such as oleic, linoleic, linolenic, | |||
eicosapentaenoic, and docosahexaenoic acids added directly to intact human platelets greatly enhance protein | |||
kinase C activation as judged by the phosphorylation of its specific endogenous substrate, a 47-kDa | |||
protein." "I<strong>n the presence of ionomycin and either 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol or phorbol 12-myristate | |||
13-acetate, the release of serotonin from the platelets is also remarkably increased by cis-unsaturated | |||
fatty acids. The effect of these fatty acids is observed at concentrations less than 50 microM. | |||
Saturated fatty acids and trans-unsaturated fatty acids are inactive."</strong> | |||
". . . cis-unsaturated fatty acids increase an apparent sensitivity of the platelet response to Ca2+. The | |||
results suggest that cis-unsaturated fatty acids, which are presumably produced from phosphatidylcholine by | |||
signal-dependent activation of phospholipase A2, may take part directly in cell signaling through the | |||
protein kinase C pathway." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Jpn J Physiol 1969 Apr 15;19(2):176-86. <strong> | |||
Lipolytic action of serotonin in brown adipose tissue in vitro.</strong> | |||
Yoshimura K, Hiroshige T, Itoh S | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hepatology 2000 Sep;32(3):542-6. <strong> | |||
Glycine prevents apoptosis of rat sinusoidal endothelial cells caused by deprivation of vascular | |||
endothelial growth factor.</strong> Zhang Y, Ikejima K, Honda H, Kitamura T, Takei Y, Sato N | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mol Pharmacol 1999 Sep;56(3):455-63. <strong> | |||
Dietary glycine and renal denervation prevents cyclosporin A-induced hydroxyl radical production in rat | |||
kidney.</strong> Zhong Z, Connor HD, Yin M, Moss N, Mason RP, Bunzendahl H, Forman DT, Thurman RG | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
" Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. | |||
<a href="http://www.RayPeat.com" target="_blank">www.RayPeat.com</a> | |||
</p> | |||
</body> | |||
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<head><title>Unsaturated Vegetable Oils: Toxic</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Unsaturated Vegetable Oils: Toxic | |||
</h1> | |||
<p>GLOSSARY:</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Immunodeficiency (weakness of the immune system) can take many forms. AIDS, for example, refers to an | |||
immunodeficiency which is "acquired," rather than "inborn." Radiation and vegetable oils can cause "acquired | |||
immunodeficiency." Unsaturated oils, especially polyunsaturates, weaken the immune system's function in ways | |||
that are similar to the damage caused by radiation, hormone imbalance, cancer, aging, or viral infections. | |||
The media discuss sexually transmitted and drug-induced immunodeficiency, but it isn't yet considered polite | |||
to discuss vegetable oil-induced immunodeficiency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Unsaturated oils: When an oil is saturated, that means that the molecule has all the hydrogen atoms it can | |||
hold. Unsaturation means that some hydrogen atoms have been removed, and this opens the structure of the | |||
molecule in a way that makes it susceptible to attack by free radicals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Free radicals are reactive molecular fragments that occur even in healthy cells, and can damage the cell. | |||
When unsaturated oils are exposed to free radicals they can create chain reactions of free radicals that | |||
spread the damage in the cell, and contribute to the cell's aging. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rancidity of oils occurs when they are exposed to oxygen, in the body just as in the bottle. Harmful free | |||
radicals are formed, and oxygen is used up. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Essential fatty acids (EFA) are, according to the textbooks, linoleic acid and linolenic acid, and they are | |||
supposed to have the status of "vitamins," which must be taken in the diet to make life possible. However, | |||
we are able to synthesize our own unsaturated fats when we don't eat the "EFA," so they are not "essential." | |||
The term thus appears to be a misnomer. [M. E. Hanke, "Biochemistry," Encycl. Brit. Book of the Year, 1948.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: You say vegetable oils are hazardous to your health. What vegetable oils are you talking about? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mainly, I'm referring to soybean oil, corn oil, safflower oil, canola, sesame oil, sunflower seed oil, palm | |||
oil, and any others that are labeled as "unsaturated" or "polyunsaturated." Almond oil, which is used in | |||
many cosmetics, is very unsaturated. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Chemically, the material that makes these oils very toxic is the polyunsaturated fat itself. These | |||
unsaturated oils are found in very high concentrations in many seeds, and in the fats of animals that have | |||
eaten a diet containing them. The fresh oils, whether cold pressed or consumed as part of the living plant | |||
material, are intrinsically toxic, and it is not any special industrial treatment that makes them toxic. | |||
Since these oils occur in other parts of plants at lower concentration, and in the animals which eat the | |||
plants, it is impossible to eat a diet which lacks them, unless special foods are prepared in the | |||
laboratory. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
These toxic oils are sometimes called the "essential fatty acids" or "vitamin F," but this concept of the | |||
oils as essential nutrients was clearly disproved over 50 years ago. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Linoleic and linolenic acids, the "essential fatty acids," and other polyunsaturated fatty acids, which are | |||
now fed to pigs to fatten them, in the form of corn and soy beans, cause the animals' fat to be chemically | |||
equivalent to vegetable oil. In the late 1940s, chemical toxins were used to suppress the thyroid function | |||
of pigs, to make them get fatter while consuming less food. When that was found to be carcinogenic, it was | |||
then found that corn and soy beans had the same antithyroid effect, causing the animals to be fattened at | |||
low cost. The animals' fat becomes chemically similar to the fats in their food, causing it to be equally | |||
toxic, and equally fattening. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
These oils are derived from seeds, but their abundance in some meat has led to a lot of confusion about | |||
"animal fats." Many researchers still refer to lard as a "saturated fat," but this is simply incorrect when | |||
pigs are fed soybeans and corn. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: How are these oils hazardous to your health? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ultimately, all systems of the body are harmed by an excess of these oils. There are two reasons for this. | |||
One is that the plants produce the oils for protection, not only to store energy for the germination of the | |||
seed. To defend the seeds from the animals that would eat them, the oils block the digestive enzymes in the | |||
animals' stomachs. Digestion is one of our most basic functions, and evolution has built many other systems | |||
by using variations of that system; as a result, all of these systems are damaged by the substances which | |||
damage the digestive system. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The other reason is that the seeds are designed to germinate in early spring, so their energy stores must be | |||
accessible when the temperatures are cool, and they normally don't have to remain viable through the hot | |||
summer months. Unsaturated oils are liquid when they are cold, and this is necessary for any organism that | |||
lives at low temperatures. For example, fish in cold water would be stiff if they contained saturated fats. | |||
These oils easily get rancid (spontaneously oxidizing) when they are warm and exposed to oxygen. Seeds | |||
contain a small amount of vitamin E to delay rancidity. When the oils are stored in our tissues, they are | |||
much warmer, and more directly exposed to oxygen, than they would be in the seeds, and so their tendency to | |||
oxidize is very great. These oxidative processes can damage enzymes and other parts of cells, and especially | |||
their ability to produce energy. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The enzymes which break down proteins are inhibited by unsaturated fats, and these enzymes are needed not | |||
only for digestion, but also for production of thyroid hormones, clot removal, immunity, and the general | |||
adaptability of cells. The risks of abnormal blood clotting, inflammation, immune deficiency, shock, aging, | |||
obesity, and cancer are increased. Thyroid and progesterone are decreased. Since the unsaturated oils block | |||
protein digestion in the stomach, we can be malnourished even while "eating well." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Plants produce many protective substances to repel or injure insects and other animals that eat them. They | |||
produce their own pesticides. The oils in seeds have this function. On top of this natural toxicity, the | |||
plants are sprayed with industrial pesticides, which can concentrate in the seed oils. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It isn't the quantity of these polyunsaturated oils which governs the harm they do, but the relationship | |||
between them and the saturated fats. Obesity, free radical production, the formation of age pigment, blood | |||
clotting, inflammation, immunity, and energy production are all responsive to the ratio of unsaturated fats | |||
to saturated fats, and the higher this ratio is, the greater the probability of harm there is. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are interesting interactions between these oils and estrogen. For example, puberty occurs at an | |||
earlier age if estrogen is high, or if these oils are more abundant in the diet. This is probably a factor | |||
in the development of cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
All systems of the body are harmed by an excess of these oils. There are three main kinds of damage: one, | |||
hormonal imbalances, two, damage to the immune system, and three, oxidative damage. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: How do they cause hormonal imbalances? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are many changes in hormones caused by unsaturated fats. Their best understood effect is their | |||
interference with the function of the thyroid gland. Unsaturated oils block thyroid hormone secretion, its | |||
movement in the circulatory system, and the response of tissues to the hormone. When the thyroid hormone is | |||
deficient, the body is generally exposed to increased levels of estrogen. The thyroid hormone is essential | |||
for making the "protective hormones" progesterone and pregnenolone, so these hormones are lowered when | |||
anything interferes with the function of the thyroid. The thyroid hormone is required for using and | |||
eliminating cholesterol, so cholesterol is likely to be raised by anything which blocks the thyroid | |||
function. [B. Barnes and L. Galton, Hypothyroidism, 1976, and 1994 references.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: How do they damage the immune system? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vegetable oil is recognized as a drug for knocking out the immune system. Vegetable oil emulsions were used | |||
to nourish cancer patients, but it was discovered that the unsaturated oils were suppressing their immune | |||
systems. The same products, in which vegetable oil is emulsified with water for intravenous injection, are | |||
now marketed specifically for the purpose of suppressing immunity in patients who have had organ | |||
transplants. Using the oils in foods has the same harmful effect on the immune system. [E. A. Mascioli, et | |||
al.,Lipids 22(6) 421, 1987.] Unsaturated fats directly kill white blood cells. [C. J. Meade and J. Martin, | |||
Adv. Lipid Res., 127, 1978.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: How do they cause oxidative damage? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Unsaturated oils get rancid when exposed to air; that is called oxidation, and it is the same process that | |||
occurs when oil paint "dries." Free radicals are produced in the process. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This process is accelerated at higher temperatures. The free radicals produced in this process react with | |||
parts of cells, such as molecules of DNA and protein and may become attached to those molecules, causing | |||
abnormalities of structure and function. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: What if I eat only organically grown vegetable oils? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Even without the addition of agricultural chemicals, an excess of unsaturated vegetable oils damages the | |||
human body. Cancer can't occur, unless there are unsaturated oils in the diet. [C. Ip, et al., Cancer Res. | |||
45, 1985.] Alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver cannot occur unless there are unsaturated oils in the diet. | |||
[Nanji and French, Life Sciences. 44, 1989.] Heart disease can be produced by unsaturated oils, and | |||
prevented by adding saturated oils to the diet. [J. K. G. Kramer, et al., Lipids 17, 372, 1983.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q. What oils are safe? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Coconut and olive oil are the only vegetable oils that are really safe, but butter and lamb fat, which are | |||
highly saturated, are generally very safe (except when the animals have been poisoned). Coconut oil is | |||
unique in its ability to prevent weight-gain or cure obesity, by stimulating metabolism. It is quickly | |||
metabolized, and functions in some ways as an antioxidant. Olive oil, though it is somewhat fattening, is | |||
less fattening than corn or soy oil, and contains an | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
antioxidant which makes it protective against heart disease and cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Israel had the world's highest incidence of breast cancer when they allowed the insecticide lindane to be | |||
used in dairies, and the cancer rate decreased immediately after the government prohibited its use. The | |||
United States has fairly good laws to control the use of cancer-causing agents in the food supply, but they | |||
are not vigorously enforced. Certain cancers are several times more common among corn farmers than among | |||
other farmers, presumably because corn "requires" the use of more pesticides. This probably makes corn oil's | |||
toxicity greater than it would be otherwise, but even the pure, organically grown material is toxic, because | |||
of its intrinsic unsaturation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the United States, lard is toxic because the pigs are fed large quantities of corn and soy beans. Besides | |||
the intrinsic toxicity of the seed oils, they are contaminated with agricultural chemicals. Corn farmers | |||
have a very high incidence of cancer, presumably because of the pesticides they use on their crop. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: But aren't "tropical oils" bad for us? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In general, tropical oils are much more healthful than oils produced in a cold climate. This is because | |||
tropical plants live at a temperature that is close to our natural body temperature. Tropical oils are | |||
stable at high temperatures. When we eat tropical oils, they don't get rancid in our tissues as the | |||
cold-climate seed oils, such as corn oil, safflower oil and soy oil, do. [R.B. Wolf, J. Am. Oil Chem. Soc. | |||
59, 230, 1982; R. Wolfe, Chem 121, Univ. of Oregon, 1986.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When added to a balanced diet, coconut oil slightly lowers the cholesterol level, which is exactly what is | |||
expected when a dietary change raises thyroid function. This same increase in thyroid function and metabolic | |||
rate explains why people and animals that regularly eat coconut oil are lean, and remarkably free of heart | |||
disease and cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although I don't recommend "palm oil" as a food, because I think it is less stable than coconut oil, some | |||
studies show that it contains valuable nutrients. For example, it contains antioxidants similar to vitamin | |||
E, which lowers both LDL cholesterol and a platelet clotting factor. [B. A. Bradlow, University of Illinois, | |||
Chicago; Science News 139, 268, 1991.] Coconut oil and other tropical oils also contain some hormones that | |||
are related to pregnenolone or progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: Isn't coconut oil fattening? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Coconut oil is the least fattening of all the oils. Pig farmers tried to use it to fatten their animals, but | |||
when it was added to the animal feed, coconut oil made the pigs lean [See Encycl. Brit. Book of the Year, | |||
1946]. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: What about olive oil? Isn't it more fattening than other vegetable oils? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In this case, as with coconut oil, "fattening" has more to do with your ability to burn calories than with | |||
the caloric value of the oil. Olive oil has a few more calories per quart than corn or soy oil, but since it | |||
doesn't damage our ability to burn calories as much as the unsaturated oils do, it is less fattening. Extra | |||
virgin olive oil is the best grade, and contains an antioxidant that protects against cancer and heart | |||
disease. [1994, Curr. Conts.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: Is "light" olive oil okay? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
No. Now and then someone learns how to make a profit from waste material. "Knotty pine" boards were changed | |||
from a discarded material to a valued decorative material by a little marketing skill. Light olive oil is a | |||
low grade material which sometimes has a rancid smell and probably shouldn't be used as food. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: Is margarine okay? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There are several problems with margarine. The manufacturing process introduces some toxins, including a | |||
unique type of fat which has been associated with heart disease. [Sci. News, 1974; 1991.] There are likely | |||
to be dyes and preservatives added to margarine. And newer products contain new chemicals that haven't been | |||
in use long enough to know whether they are safe. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
However, the basic hardening process, hydrogenation of the oils, has been found to make the oils less likely | |||
to cause cancer. If I had to choose between eating ordinary corn oil or corn oil that was 100% saturated, to | |||
make a hard margarine, I would choose the hard margarine, because it resists oxidation, isn't suppressive to | |||
the thyroid gland, and doesn't cause cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: What about butter? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Butter contains natural vitamin A and D and some beneficial natural hormones. It is less fattening than the | |||
unsaturated oils. There is much less cholesterol in an ounce of butter than in a lean chicken breast [about | |||
1/5 as much cholesterol in fat as in lean meat on a calorie basis, according to R. Reiser of Texas A & M | |||
Univ., 1979.]. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: Are fish oils good for you? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some of the unsaturated fats in fish are definitely less toxic than those in corn oil or soy oil, but that | |||
doesn't mean they are safe. Fifty years ago, it was found that a large amount of cod liver oil in dogs' diet | |||
increased their death rate from cancer by 20 times, from the usual 5% to 100%. A diet rich in fish oil | |||
causes intense production of toxic lipid peroxides, and has been observed to reduce a man's sperm count to | |||
zero. [H. Sinclair, Prog. Lipid Res. 25, 667, 1989.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: What about lard? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In this country, lard is toxic beause the pigs are fed large quantities of corn and soy beans. Besides the | |||
natural toxicity of the seed oils, the oils are contaminated with agricultural chemicals. Corn farmers have | |||
a very high incidence of cancer, presumably because corn "requires" the use of more pesticides. This | |||
probably makes corn oil's toxicity greater than it would be otherwise. but even the pure, organically grown | |||
material is toxic, because of its unsaturation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Women with breast cancer have very high levels of agricultural pesticides in their breasts [See Science | |||
News, 1992, 1994]. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Israel had the world's highest incidence of breast cancer when they allowed the insecticide lindane to be | |||
used in dairies, and the cancer rate decreased immediately after the government prohibited its use. The | |||
United States has fairly good laws to control the use of cancer-causing agents in the food supply, but they | |||
are not vigorously enforced. [World Incid. of Cancer, 1992] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q: I have no control over oils when eating out. What can I do to offset the harmful effects of | |||
polyunsaturated oils? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A small amount of these oils won't kill you. It is the proportion of them in your diet that matters. A | |||
little extra vitamin E (such as 100 units per day) will take care of an occasional American restaurant meal. | |||
Based on animal studies, it would take a teaspoonful per day of corn or soy oil added to a fat-free diet to | |||
significantly increase our risk of cancer. Unfortunately, it is impossible to devise a fat-free diet outside | |||
of a laboratory. Vegetables, grains, nuts, fish and meats all naturally contain large amounts of these oils, | |||
and the extra oil used in cooking becomes a more serious problem. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Q Why are the unsaturated oils so popular if they are dangerous? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It's a whole system of promotion, advertising, and profitability. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
50 years ago, paints and varnishes were made of soy oil, safflower oil, and linseed (flax seed) oil. Then | |||
chemists learned how to make paint from petroleum, which was much cheaper. As a result, the huge seed oil | |||
industry found its crop increasingly hard to sell. Around the same time, farmers were experimenting with | |||
poisons to make their pigs get fatter with less food, and they discovered that corn and soy beans served the | |||
purpose, in a legal way. The crops that had been grown for the paint industry came to be used for animal | |||
food. Then these foods that made animals get fat cheaply came to be promoted as foods for humans, but they | |||
had to direct attention away from the fact that they are very fattening. The "cholesterol" focus was just | |||
one of the marketing tools used by the oil industry. Unfortunately it is the one that has lasted the | |||
longest, even after the unsaturated oils were proven to cause heart disease as well as cancer. [Study at | |||
L.A. Veterans Hospital, 1971.] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
I use some of these oils (walnut oil is very nice, but safflower oil is cheaper) for oil painting, but I am | |||
careful to wash my hands thoroughly after I touch them, because they can be absorbed through the skin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong>SUMMARY</strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Unsaturated fats cause aging, clotting, inflammation, cancer, and weight gain. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Avoid foods which contain the polyunsaturated oils, such as corn, soy, safflower, flax, cottonseed, canola, | |||
peanut, and sesame oil. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mayonnaise, pastries, even candies may contain these oils; check the labels for ingredients. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pork is now fed corn and soy beans, so lard is usually as toxic as those oils; use only lean pork. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Fish oils are usually highly unsaturated; "dry" types of fish, and shellfish, used once or twice a week, are | |||
good. Avoid cod liver oil. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Use vitamin E. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Use coconut oil, butter, and olive oil. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Unsaturated fats intensify estrogen's harmful effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
1. C. F. Aylsworth, C. W. Welsch, J. J. Kabora, J. E. Trosko, "Effect of fatty acids on junctional | |||
communication: Possible role in tumor promotion by dietary fat," Lipids 22(6), 445-54, 1987. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
2. J. M. Bell and P. K. Lundberg, "Effects of a commercial soy lecithin preparation on development of | |||
sensorimotor behavior & brain biochemicals in the rat," Dev. Psychobiol. 8(1), 59-66, 1985. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
3. R. S. Britton and B. R. Bacon, "Role of free radicals in liver diseases and hepatic fibrosis," | |||
Hepatogastroenterology 41(4), 343-348, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
4. M. S. Brown, et al., "Receptor mediated uptake of lipoprotein-cholesterol and its utilization for steroid | |||
synthesis," Recent Progress in Hormone Res. 35, 315-257, 1979. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
5. P. A. Cerutti, "Oxy-radicals and cancer," Lancet 455(8926), 862-863, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
6. I. Davies and A. P. Fotheringham, "Lipofuscin--Does it affect cellular performance?" Exp. Gerontol. 16, | |||
119-125, 1981. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
7. K. L. Erickson, et al., "Dietary lipid modulation of immune responsiveness," Lipids 18, 468-74, 1983. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
8. V. A. Folcik and M. K. Cathcart, "Predominance of esterified hydroperoxy-linoleic acid in human | |||
monocyte-oxidized LDL," J. Lipid Res. 35(9), 1570-1582, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
9. Fuller, C. J. and I. Jialal, "Effects of antioxidants and fatty acids on low-density-lipoprotein | |||
oxidation," Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 60(6 Suppl.), S1010-S1013, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
10. M. C. Galli, et al., "Peroxidation potential of rat thymus during development and involution," Comp. | |||
Biochem. Physiol (C) 107(3), 435-440, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
11. J. M. Gaziano, et al., "Supplementation with beta-carotene in vivo and in vitro does not inhibit low | |||
density lipoprotein oxidation," Atherosclerosis 112(2), 187-195, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
12. M. B. Grisham, "Oxidants and free radicals in inflammatory bowel disease," Lancet 344(8926), 859-861, | |||
1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
13. J. M. C. Gutteridge, "Antioxidants, nutritional supplements and life-threaening diseases," Brit. J. | |||
Biomed. Sci. 51(3), 288-295, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
14. D. Harman, et al., "Free radical theory of aging: effect of dietary fat on central nervous system | |||
function," J. American Geriatrics Soc. 24(1), 292-98, 1976. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
15. W. S. Hartroft and E. A. Porta, "Ceroid pigments," chapter VIII in Present Knowledge in Nutrition, 3rd | |||
Edition, Nutrition Foundation, N.Y., 1967. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
16. H. J. Helbock, et al., (Univ. of Calif. Berkeley) January, 1993 Pediatrics; in Science News 143, 78, | |||
1993. "Toxic 'fats' in preemie supplement." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
H. R. Hirsch, "The waste-product theory of aging: Cell division rate as a function of waste volume," Mech. | |||
Ageing Dev. 36, 95-107, 1986. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
17. S. G. Imre, et al., "Increased proportion of docosahexanoic acid and high lipid peroxidation capacity in | |||
erythrocytes of stroke patients," Stroke 25(12), 2416-2420, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
18. Clement Ip, et al., "Requirement of essential fatty acids for mammary tumorigenesis," Cancer Res. 45(5), | |||
1997-2001, 1985. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
19. P. V. Johnston, "Dietary fat, eicosanoids, and immunity," Adv. in Lipid Res. 21, 103-41, 1985. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
20. S. Kasayna, et al., "Unsaturated fatty acids are required for continuous proliferation of transformed | |||
androgen-dependent cells by fibroblast growth factor family proteins," Cancer Research 54(24), 6441-6445, | |||
1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
21. H. A. Kleinveld, et al., "Vitamin E and fatty acid intervention does not attenuate the progression of | |||
atherosclerosis in watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic rabbits," Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Biol. 15(2), | |||
290-297, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
22. J. K. G. Kramer, et al., Lipids 17, 372, 1983. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
23. I. A. Kudryavtsev, et al., "Character of the modifying action of polyunsaturated fatty acids on growth | |||
of transplantable tumors of various types," Bull. Exp. Biol & Med. 105(4), 567-70, 1986. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
24. R. D. Lynch, "Utilization of polyunsaturated fatty acids by human diploid cells aging in vitro," Lipids | |||
15(6), 412-20, 1967. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
25. M. Martinez and A. Ballabriga, "Effects of parenteral nutrition with high doses of linoleate on the | |||
developing human liver and brain," Lipids 22(3), 133-8, 1987. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
26. R. S. Mehta, et al., "High fish oil diet increases oxidative stress potential in mammary gland of | |||
spontaneously hypertensive rats," Clin. Exp. Pharmacol. Physiol. 21(11), 881-889, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
27. A. A. Nanji and S. W. French, "Dietary linoleic acid is required for development of experimentally | |||
induced alcoholic liver-injury," Life Sciences 44, 223-7, 1989. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
28. J. A. Lindsay, et al., "Fatty acid metabolism and cell proliferation," Lipids 18, 566-9, 1983. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
29. M. L. Pearce and S. Dayton, "Incidence of cancer in men on a diet high in polyunsaturated fat," Lancet | |||
1, 464-467, 1971. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
30. Pryor, W. A., "Free radicals and lipid proxidation--what they are and how they got that way," Natural | |||
Antioxidants in Human, pp. 1-24, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
31. P. Purasiri, et al., "Modulation of cytokine production in vivo by dietary essential fatty acids in | |||
patients with colorectal cancer," Clin. Sci. 87(6), 711-717, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
32. S. Rapoport and T. Schewe, "Endogenous inhibitors of the respiratory chain," Trends in Biochemical Sci., | |||
Aug., 1977, 186-189. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
33. H. Selye, "Sensitization by corn oil for the production of cardiac necrosis...," Amer. J. of Cardiology | |||
23, 719-22, 1969. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
34. D. A. Street, et al., "Serum antioxidants and myocardial infarction--Are low levels of carotenoids and | |||
alpha-tocopherol risk factors for myocardial infarction?" Circulation 90(3), 1154-1161, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
35. M. Takei, et al., "Inhibitory effects of calcium antagonists on mitochondrial swelling induced by lipid | |||
peroxidation or arachidonic acid in the rat brain in vitro," Neurochem. Res. 29(9), 1199-1206, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
36. J. P. Thomas, et al., "Involvement of preexisting lipid hydroperoxides in Cu2+-stimulated oxidation of | |||
low-density lipoprotein," Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 315(2), 244-254, 1994. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
37. C. W. Welsch, "Review of the effects of dietary fat on experimental mammary gland tumorigenesis: Role of | |||
lipid peroxidation," Free Radical Biol. Med. 18(4), 757-773, 1995. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong>Essential Fatty Acids ("EFA"): A Technical Point</strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Those fatty acids, such as linoleic acid and linolenic acid, which are found in linseed oil, soy oil, walnut | |||
oil, almond oil, corn oil, etc., are essential for the spontaneous development of cancer, and also appear to | |||
be decisive factors in the development of age pigment, alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver, diabetes, obesity, | |||
stress-induced immunodeficiency, some aspects of the shock reaction, epilepsy, brain swelling, congenital | |||
retardation, hardening of the arteries, cataracts, and other degenerative conditions. They are possibly the | |||
most important toxin for animals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The suppression of an enzyme system is characteristic of toxins. The "EFA" powerfully, almost absolutely, | |||
inhibit the enzyme systems--desaturases and elongases--which make our native unsaturated fatty acids. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
After weaning, these native fats gradually disappear from the tissues and are replaced by the EFA and their | |||
derivatives. The age-related decline in our ability to use oxygen and to produce energy corresponds closely | |||
to the substitution of linoleic acid for the endogenous fats, in cardiolipin, which regulates the crucial | |||
respiratory enzyme, cytochrome oxidase. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although the fish oils are less effective inhibitors of the enzymes, they are generally similar to the seed | |||
oils in their ability to promote cancer, age-pigment formation, free radical damage, etc. Their only special | |||
nutritional value seems to be their vitamin A and vitamin D content. Since vitamin A is important in the | |||
development of the eye, it is interesting that claims are being made for the essentiality of some of the | |||
fatty acid components of fish oil, in relation to the development of the eye. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The polyunsaturated oils from seeds are recommended for use in paints and varnishes, but skin contact with | |||
these substances should be avoided. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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Suitable Fats, Unsuitable Fats: Issues in Nutrition | |||
</title> | |||
</head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Suitable Fats, Unsuitable Fats: Issues in Nutrition | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
For fifty years, the mass media have been making the public think about the fats in their diet, filling the | |||
culture with clich"s about bad saturated animal fats that raise cholesterol, or lately the trans-fats in | |||
margarine, and images of arteries clogged by bad fats. The public instruction about the fats we should eat | |||
resembles the owner's manual for a car, that tells you what kind of motor oil and fuel and coolant to use; | |||
they are telling us that they know how our body works, and that they know what it needs. But now, even after | |||
the human genome has supposedly been partly "decoded," the biological functions of the fats have hardly | |||
begun to be investigated. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
To understand the present issues regarding fats in nutrition and medicine it's helpful to look at the | |||
historical development of biochemical and physiological fat research in a variety of contexts, including | |||
agriculture and economics, as well as considering the effects of the changing ideas about cell structure, | |||
vitamins, hormones, immunology, brain development, evolution, and the growing understanding of the way | |||
physiology interacts with ecology. We need to recognize the complexity of the physiology of fats, to | |||
appreciate the complexity of the living organism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Financial considerations have driven fat research in very obvious ways. In 1883, Mark Twain described how | |||
commercial fraud was making use of new technology to substitute cheap fats and oils for butter and olive | |||
oil.. Hard fats such as tallow, which had been used for making soap and candles, began to be widely used as | |||
a substitute for butter in the 19th century. Around 1912, chemists found economical ways to solidify (for | |||
use as a butter substitute) the very cheap liquid oils, such as cottonseed oil, linseed oil, whale oil, and | |||
fish oils, which been used mostly as fuels or varnish. The seed oils were so cheap that meat packers quickly | |||
became major producers of hydrogenated cottonseed and soy oils, to extend their limited supply of lard or | |||
tallow for sale as shortening or margarine. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Between 1912 and 1927 there were several studies that reported that animals could live on a fat-free diet, | |||
and that in fact they lived longer, and without the normal mortality from cancer. In the 1940s and 1950s, | |||
most textbooks that mentioned the idea that certain fats were essential nutrients described it as a | |||
controversial idea. But the oil industries used public relations effectively to sell the medical (heart | |||
protective) benefits of a diet containing increased amounts of linoleic and linolenic acids, which they | |||
called the essential fatty acids. They began citing a 1929 publication (by G. Burr and M. Burr) that claimed | |||
to demonstrate the essentiality of those fatty acids, while ignoring the publications that pointed in | |||
different directions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The cheapness of the seed oils led to their use in animal feeds, to promote growth. By the 1940s, the | |||
polyunsaturated oils, including fish oils, were known to cause deterioration of the brain, muscles, and | |||
gonads in a variety of animals, and this was found to be caused mainly by their destruction of vitamin E. A | |||
little later, the disease called steatitis or yellow fat disease was found to be produced in various animals | |||
that were fed too much fish or fish oil. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The reason linseed oil and fish oil were used for making varnishes and paints was that they are "drying | |||
oils," reacting with oxygen to polymerize and harden. The physical and chemical propertiess of the oils are | |||
fairly well understood, and among the polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) the omega -3 fatty acids react most | |||
easily with oxygen. Heat, light, and moisture increase their spontaneous interactions with oxygen, and | |||
besides polymerizing, these oils produce a variety of reactive particles, including acrolein, which combine | |||
with other substances, such as cellular proteins and DNA, with highly toxic effects. At low temperatures and | |||
low oxygen concentrations these oils are not highly reactive. Fats that harden at low temperatures (as | |||
saturated fats do) wouldn't be convenient for organisms that live in a cool environment, and so organisms | |||
regulate the type of fat they synthesize according to the temperature of their tissues. The fact that | |||
certain types of polyunsaturated fatty acids function nicely in fish, worms, and insects, doesn't mean that | |||
they are ideal fats for mammals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The fact that vitamin E prevented or cured some of the major diseases in farm animals caused by excessive | |||
PUFA, and that it could retard the development of rancidity in stored oils, led quickly to the persistent | |||
belief that lipid peroxidation is the only toxic effect of the vegetable oils. However, the oils were being | |||
seen to cause other problems, including accelerated aging and obesity, but those problems weren't of | |||
interest to farmers, who wanted to sell plump young animals as cheaply and quickly as possible. Even fresh | |||
oils have toxic effects, and the oxidative damage they do is often the consequence of these other toxic | |||
actions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Another cheap food additive, coconut oil, was found to increase feed consumption while slowing weight gain, | |||
so it wasn't popular in the meat industry. The highly unsaturated seed oils had the opposite effect, of | |||
producing a rapid fattening of the animal, while decreasing feed consumption, so by 1950 corn and soybeans | |||
were widely considered to be optimal feeds for maximizing profits in the production of meat animals. It was | |||
at this time that the industry found that it could market the liquid oils directly to consumers, as | |||
health-promoting foods, without bothering to turn them into solid shortening or margarine. Somehow, few | |||
physiologists continued to think about the implications of metabolic slowing, obesity, and the related | |||
degenerative diseases. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As vitamin research advanced in the 1940s, Roger Williams' lab at the Clayton Foundation Biochemical | |||
Institute, University of Texas at Austin, recognized the "fat deficiency disease" of the Burrs as a | |||
deficiency of vitamin B6, and showed that when they produced the condition with a diet similar to the one | |||
the Burrs had used, they could cure it by administering vitamin B6. In the early 1930s George Burr had | |||
discovered that animals on a fat free diet had an extremely high rate of metabolism, but he didn't | |||
investigate the important ramifications of that observation, such as their increased need for vitamins and | |||
minerals, in accordance with their rate of metabolism. The PUFA slowed metabolism, and that effect was good | |||
for agriculture. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The commercial pressure on fat research has created a new way of writing research reports, that several | |||
decades earlier wouldn't have been acceptable. For example, the effects of a specific fat on a few of the | |||
components of a complex process such as clotting are often described in the title, introduction, and | |||
conclusion of an article as if they were revealing a way to prevent heart disease. The effects of | |||
unsaturated fats on cells <em> | |||
in vitro</em> are often the opposite of their effects in living animals, but editors are allowing | |||
authors to claim that their <em>in vitro</em> | |||
results justify dietary or therapeutic use of the fats. Journals of medicine and nutrition are now preferred | |||
sites for commercial press releases, composed to superficially resemble scientific reports. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The suppressive effects of unsaturated fats on mitochondrial energy production have been widely | |||
investigated, since it is that effect that makes animal fattening with PUFA so economical. Rather than | |||
interpreting that as a toxic effect, using the innate structure and function of the mitochondrion as a point | |||
of reference from which to evaluate dietary components, the consumption of "good" oils is being used as the | |||
reference point from which to evaluate the meaning of metabolism ("efficiency is good," "low oxygen | |||
consumption is good"). Building on the idea that the oils are health-promoters which increase metabolic | |||
efficiency, the never-viable "rate of aging" theory was resuscitated: The anti-respiratory effect of PUFA is | |||
used (illogically) to return to the idea that aging occurs in proportion to the amount of oxygen consumed, | |||
because animals which lack the supposedly essential nutrients ("defective animals") consume oxygen | |||
rapidly--burning calories rapidly, they are supposed to be like a candle that won't last as long if it burns | |||
intensely. The old theory is simply resuscitated to explain why the anti-respiratory action of PUFA might be | |||
beneficial, justifying further promotion of their use as food and drugs. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ordinarily, in biochemistry and physiology the inhibition of an enzyme is taken as a suggestion of toxicity, | |||
but when the point of reference is the idea of the goodness of PUFA, the <em>activity</em> of an intrinsic | |||
enzyme is taken to be evidence of harm, and its <em>inhibition</em> (by PUFA) is taken to be the proper, | |||
healthful situation. The enzyme that produces the Mead fatty acid is strongly inhibited by PUFA seed oils | |||
(less strongly by fish oils), and so the presence of the Mead acid in the tissues is taken as evidence that | |||
the animal is suffering damage resulting from the absence of PUFA. The Mead acid happens to have some | |||
valuable anti-inflammatory effects, and is associated with many biological advantages, but research in that | |||
direction is prevented by the lack of funding. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By 1920, the polyunsaturated fatty acids were recognized to inhibit proteolytic enzymes. At that time, the | |||
production of unsaturated fat was considered to be a feature of certain pathogens, able to overcome the | |||
proteolytic-phagocytic functions of the immune system. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Scattered studies have found that polyunsaturated fats inhibit the proteolytic enzymes involved in the | |||
digestion of food, in the removal of clots, in the formation of thyroid hormone, and many other essential | |||
physiological processes. But currently, the only implication being drawn from this broad class of effects of | |||
the PUFA is that some proteolytic enzymes are involved in disease processes, and consequently increased | |||
consumption of PUFA would be appropriate, because of their ability to suppress a conditionally harmful | |||
proteolytic enzyme. Since the organism consists mainly of proteins, there are complex innate systems for | |||
regulating the proteolytic enzymes, activating or inactivating them as needed, and such complexity isn't | |||
likely to depend on variable, unstable dietary factors. Exogenous substances that inhibit some proteases | |||
could create an unlimited variety of functional and anatomical irregularities. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some of the interesting enzymes affected specifically by polyunsaturated fatty acids are those involved in | |||
hormone production. While they inhibit the formation of progesterone and androgens, they activate the | |||
synthesis of estrogen, which in turn activates the release of more free polyunsaturated fatty acids from the | |||
tissues, in a positive feedback pattern. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The inhibition of detoxification enzymes by PUFA (Tsoutsikos, et al., 2004) affects many processes, such as | |||
the elimination of estrogen, contributing to the positive feedback between estrogen and the oils. The | |||
meaning of this tends to be lost, because of the estrogen industry's effective campaigns. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Another situation in which fatty acids participate in a positive feedback system is the stress reaction, in | |||
which the released fatty acids impair mitochondrial energy production, increasing the stress and leading to | |||
further release of fatty acids. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the perennial theories of aging that has remained viable is the metaplasm/lipofuscin/age pigment | |||
theory, the idea that a toxic material accumulates in tissues over time. The age pigment contains proteins, | |||
cross-linked PUFA, and metals. The inhibition of proteolytic enzymes is involved in its accumulation, and | |||
the ratio of PUFA to saturated fatty acids is an important factor in its formation. Estrogen is one of the | |||
factors that can promote the formation of age pigment, probably partly because its lipolytic action | |||
increases the cells' exposure to free fatty acids. The lipofuscin contributes to inhibition of proteolysis, | |||
probably partly through increased production of free radicals and hydrogen peroxide. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The proteolytic enzymes are an essential part of innate immunity, and the highly unsaturated fatty acid, | |||
EPA, which is the most immunosuppressive of the fats, strongly inhibits proteolysis in some cells. The | |||
natural killer (NK) cells and phagocytic cells are two types of cell that are suppressed by PUFA, and they | |||
are involved in many kinds of physiological events, not just the killing of tumor cells and virus infected | |||
cells. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The immunosuppressive effects of PUFA are very general. Many metabolites that are known to have harmful | |||
effects on the immune system are increased by the PUFA (histamine [Masini, et al., 1990], serotonin, | |||
lactate, nitric oxide [Omura, et al., 2001]). These substances are also involved in tumor development. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides inhibiting enzymes and being converted into prostaglandins, the polyunsaturated fatty acids have | |||
direct effects, as signals (or interference with signals) on many tissues. The belief that the PUFA are | |||
essential nutrients has influenced the way cellular excitability thresholds are being interpreted. Anxiety | |||
and panic may be interpreted as alertness, calmness may be interpreted as stupidity. Specifically, long-term | |||
potentiation (LTP) may contribute to seizures, senility, and excitotoxicity, as well as to learning, but | |||
many titles and conclusions equate increased LTP with "improved LTP," implying that it has biological value | |||
to the animal. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The ability of nerve cells to become quiescent after excitation is essential to learning and perception. | |||
This ability is lost with aging, as the functional balance in the brain shifts away from GABA-ergic to | |||
glutamatergic nerves. The polyunsaturated fatty acids promote the excitatory nervous state. The combination | |||
of respiratory inhibition with excitation can produce excitotoxic cell death. If the doctrine of | |||
"essentiality of PUFA" hadn't been so influential, different interpretations of excitatory thresholds, | |||
energy metabolism, and even cell structure would have been allowed to develop more fully. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The concentration of polyunsaturated fats in the brain has led many people to say that the "nutritionally | |||
essential fatty acids," especially the omega -3 fatty acids, are essential for brain development (for the | |||
formation of nerve cell membranes), and for the formation of synapses, and that increasing the amount of | |||
those fats in the diet would be desirable. The types of argument they use simply ignore the real | |||
evidence<strong>:</strong> | |||
Cells can multiply indefinitely in culture dishes without the essential fatty acids, insects can multiply | |||
for generations on diets without the unsaturated fats, forming normal synapses and brains, and mammals fed | |||
diets with extremely small amounts of the unsaturated fats grow with perfectly normal--possibly | |||
superior--brains. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the fats in the omega -9 series, that the human body can synthesize, nervonic acid, is a major | |||
constituent of brain tissue, but its important functions in brain development have hardly been investigated. | |||
Unlike the unsaturated fatty acids oleic acid, linoleic acid, and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), nervonic acid | |||
isn't associated with the "coronary risk factors," and it has been suggested that it might be used in adults | |||
to prevent obesity-related diseases. (Oda, et al., 2005). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One major area of research that has been neglected involves the role of fats in modifying the ways in which | |||
proteins and nucleic acids interact with water--arguably the most basic of all physiological processes. | |||
Unsaturated fats are more water soluble than saturated fats, and they are involved in many problems of | |||
permeability and edema. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In aging and evolution, there are systematic changes in tissue water content that appear to correspond to | |||
changes in rate of metabolism, to the degree of unsaturation of cellular fats, and to thyroid function and | |||
temperature. Metabolic intensity and longevity can be modified by changing the degree of saturation of fats | |||
in the diet and tissues, but--despite almost a century of sporadic investigations--no one has yet worked out | |||
in detail the most appropriate way to do this. But it has become clear that the "uncoupled" mitochondrion, | |||
that "wastes oxygen and calories," is protective against free radicals, cancer, and aging. Thyroid hormone | |||
and the absence of PUFA are important factors in supporting the "wasteful" mitochondrion. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although the complex interactions of anatomy, energy, temperature, fat nutrition, tissue water content, and | |||
hormones haven't been systematically investigated, some of the principles regarding the biological | |||
suitability of specific fats are already being applied in the limited context of therapy. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
At present, the most important issue is to recognize the dangers presented by the intrusion of corporate | |||
power into science, especially as it relates to nutrition and medicine, and to consider the implications of | |||
the known effects of the PUFA on all of our biological systems. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The food-derived polyunsaturated fatty acids play important roles in the development of all of the problems | |||
associated with aging--reduced immunity, insomnia, decreased learning ability, substitution of fat for | |||
muscle, susceptibility to tissue peroxidation and inflammation, growth of tumors, etc., and are probably | |||
involved in most other health problems, even in children. If research hadn't been guided by the economic | |||
interests of the seed oil industry, many of those problems would have been solved by now. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The influence of the mass media on science can be seen in two issues that are currently well known. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A popular test used for evaluating diabetes is the measurement of glycated hemoglobin, the attachment of a | |||
sugar-like fragment to the protein of hemoglobin. This is used to judge whether blood sugar is being | |||
controlled adequately. The glycation of proteins is widely believed to be a central process in aging, and is | |||
often used to argue that people should reduce their sugar consumption. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Another well publicized problem supposedly involving the reaction between sugars and proteins has to do with | |||
the discovery of the carcinogen, acrylamide, in breads and french fries. The Whole Foods Market was sued in | |||
California for selling whole wheat bread without a warning that it contained a carcinogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But the changes in proteins that occur in diabetes are mainly produced by the breakdown products of | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids. Acrylamide is produced largely by the reaction of PUFA with proteins. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sugar, by reducing the level of free fatty acids in the body, actually tends to protect against these toxic | |||
effects of the PUFA. Diabetes, like cancer, has been known for a long time to be promoted by unsaturated | |||
oils in the diet, rather than by sugar. The seed oil industry has been more effective than the sugar | |||
industry in lobbying and advertising, and the effects can be seen in the assumptions that shape medical and | |||
biological research. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biochem Pharmacol. 1990 Mar 1;39(5):879-89. <strong>Histamine release from rat mast cells induced by | |||
metabolic activation of polyunsaturated fatty acids into free radicals.</strong> Masini E, Palmerani B, | |||
Gambassi F, Pistelli A, Giannella E, Occupati B, Ciuffi M, Sacchi TB, Mannaioni PF. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int Heart J. 2005 Nov;46(6):975-85. <strong>Relationships between serum unsaturated fatty acids and coronary | |||
risk factors: negative relations between nervonic acid and obesity-related risk factors.</strong> Oda E, | |||
Hatada K, Kimura J, Aizawa Y, Thanikachalam PV, Watanabe K. "The objective of the present study was to | |||
analyze the relationships between serum USFA and CRF [coronary risk factors]." "<strong><hr /></strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
FEBS Lett. 2001 Jan 5;487(3):361-6. <strong>Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) induces Ca(2+)-independent | |||
activation and translocation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase and endothelium-dependent | |||
vasorelaxation.</strong> Omura M, Kobayashi S, Mizukami Y, Mogami K, Todoroki-Ikeda N, Miyake T, | |||
Matsuzaki M. "EPA stimulated NO production even in endothelial cells in situ loaded with a cytosolic Ca(2+) | |||
chelator . . . which abolished the [Ca(2+)]i elevations induced by ATP and EPA." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biochem Pharmacol. 2004 Jan 1;67(1):191-9. <strong>Evidence that unsaturated fatty acids are potent | |||
inhibitors of renal UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGT): kinetic studies using human kidney cortical | |||
microsomes and recombinant UGT1A9 and UGT2B7.</strong> Tsoutsikos P, Miners JO, Stapleton A, Thomas A, | |||
Sallustio BC, Knights KM. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lipids. 1997 Dec;32(12):1265-70. <strong>Dietary fatty acid profile affects endurance in rats.</strong> Ayre | |||
KJ, Hulbert AJ. "The diets comprised an essential fatty acid-deficient diet (containing mainly saturated | |||
fatty acids); a diet high in n-6 fatty acids, High n-6; and a diet enriched with n-3 fatty acids, High n-3. | |||
Submaximal endurance in rats fed the High n-3 diet was 44% less than in rats fed the High n-6 diet (P < | |||
0.02). All rats were then fed a standard commercial laboratory diet for a 6-wk recovery period, and their | |||
performances were reevaluated. Although endurance in all groups was lower then at 9 wk, it was again | |||
significantly 50% lower in the High n-3 group than the High n-6 group (P < 0.005). Although n-3 fats are | |||
considered beneficial for cardiovascular health, they appear to reduce endurance times, and their side | |||
effects need to be further investigated." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann Biol Clin (Paris) 2000 Sep-Oct;58(5):595-600.<strong> [Studies on the genotoxic</strong> | |||
<strong> | |||
effects of crude liver oils from 3 species of Mediterranean sharks by means of in vitro micronucleus | |||
test using human lymphocytes] | |||
</strong> | |||
Bartfai E, Orsiere T, Duffaud F, Villani P, Pompili J, Botta A. "The results of this experimental study show | |||
that the crude liver oils of three species of sharks are genotoxic and confirm a high carcinogenic risk." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vaccine. 2002 Jan 31;20(9-10):1435-44. <strong>Long-term influence of lipid nutrition on the induction of | |||
CD8(+) responses to viral or bacterial antigens.</strong> | |||
Bassaganya-Riera J, Hontecillas R, Zimmerman DR, Wannemuehler MJ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Nutr. 2001 Sep;131(9):2370-7.<strong> | |||
Dietary conjugated linoleic acid modulates phenotype and effector functions of porcine CD8(+) | |||
lymphocytes.</strong> | |||
Bassaganya-Riera J, Hontecillas R, Zimmerman DR, Wannemuehler MJ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Anim Sci, 1984 Apr, 58:4, 971-8. <strong>Essential fatty acid status and characteristics associated with | |||
colostrum-deprived gnotobiotic and conventional lambs. Growth, organ development, cell membrane | |||
integrity and factors associated with lower bowel function.</strong> Bruckner G; Grunewald KK; Tucker | |||
RE; Mitchell GE Jr "The absence of dietary linoleic acid decreased liver and spleen weights and, in general, | |||
suppressed development of organs except the brain." "The results indicate that neonatal colostrum-deprived | |||
lambs have an EFA requirement, as evidenced by decreased growth and performance characteristics in the GN | |||
linoleic deficient vs GN supplemented group, and suggests that the required level is in excess of .32% of | |||
the total caloric intake as linoleic acid." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Crit Care Med. 1996 Jul;24(7):1129-36. <strong>An increase in serum C18 unsaturated free fatty acids as a | |||
predictor of the development of acute respiratory distress syndrome. | |||
</strong>Bursten SL, Federighi DA, Parsons P, Harris WE, Abraham E, Moore EE Jr, Moore FA, Bianco JA, Singer | |||
JW, Repine JE. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Free Radic Biol Med. 1999 Jul;27(1-2):51-9. <strong>Arachidonic acid interaction with the mitochondrial | |||
electron transport chain promotes reactive oxygen species generation.</strong> Cocco T, Di Paola M, Papa | |||
S, Lorusso M. "It is shown that arachidonic acid causes an uncoupling effect under state 4 respiration of | |||
intact mitochondria as well as a marked inhibition of uncoupled respiration. While, under our conditions, | |||
the uncoupling effect is independent of the fatty acid species considered, the inhibition is stronger for | |||
unsaturated acids. Experiments carried out with mitochondrial particles indicated that the arachidonic acid | |||
dependent decrease of the respiratory activity is caused by a selective inhibition of Complex I and III. It | |||
is also shown that arachidonic acid causes a remarkable increase of hydrogen peroxide production when added | |||
to mitochondria respiring with either pyruvate+malate or succinate as substrate." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Antioxid Redox Signal. 2005 Jan-Feb;7(1-2):256-68. <strong>Lipid peroxidation in diabetes mellitus.</strong> | |||
Davi G, Falco A, Patrono C. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 2005 Mar;371(3):202-11. Epub 2005 Apr 15. <strong>Antiarrhythmic and | |||
electrophysiological effects of long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. | |||
</strong> | |||
Dhein S, Michaelis B, Mohr FW. "<strong>Atrioventricular conduction time was slowed only by DHA and | |||
EPA."</strong> "Regarding antiarrhythmic activity we found that the <strong>threshold for elicitation of | |||
a ventricular extrasystole was concentration-dependently enhanced by DHA and EPA, but not by ALA. DHA | |||
dose-dependently reduced longitudinal propagation velocity V(L)</strong> | |||
and to a lower extent transverse velocity V(T)." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem. 2002 Oct 18;277(42):39368-78. <strong>The mechanism of docosahexaenoic acid-induced | |||
phospholipase D activation inhuman lymphocytes involves exclusion of the enzyme from lipid | |||
rafts.</strong> Diaz O, Berquand A, Dubois M, Di Agostino S, Sette C, Bourgoin S, Lagarde M, Nemoz G, | |||
Prigent AF. "Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), an n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid that inhibits T lymphocyte | |||
activation, has been shown to stimulate phospholipase D (PLD) activity in stimulated human peripheral blood | |||
mononuclear cells (PBMC)." "<strong>This PLD activation might be responsible for the immunosuppressive | |||
effect of DHA because it is known to transmit antiproliferative signals in lymphoid cells."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nutrition. 2003 Feb;19(2):144-9. <strong> | |||
Diets rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids: effect on hepatic metabolism in rats.</strong> Gaiva MH, | |||
Couto RC, Oyama LM, Couto GE, Silveira VL, Ribeiro EB, Nascimento CM. "Male Wistar rats, just weaned, were | |||
fed ad libitum for 8 wk with one of the following diets: rat chow (C), rat chow containing 15% (w/w) soybean | |||
oil (S), rat chow containing 15% (w/w) fish oil (F), and rat chow containing 15% soy bean and fish oil (SF; | |||
5:1, w/w)." "Body weight gain was higher in F and SF than in C and S rats. Liver weight, lipid content, and | |||
lipogenesis rate increased in F and SF rats, although adenosine triphosphate citrate lyase activity | |||
decreased. Glycogen concentration decreased in S, F, and SF rats compared with C rats." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Br J Nutr. 2001 Sep;86(3):371-7. <strong>Polyunsaturated fatty acid-rich diets: effect on adipose tissue | |||
metabolism in rats.</strong> Gaiva MH, Couto RC, Oyama LM, Couto GE, Silveira VL, Riberio EB, Nascimento | |||
CM. "Wistar rats were fed ad libitum, for 8 weeks with one of the following diets: C, rat chow; S, rat chow | |||
containing 15 % (w/w) soyabean oil; F, rat chow containing 15 % (w/w) fish oil; SF, rat chow containing 15 % | |||
(w/w) soyabean and fish oil (5:1, w/w)." "Energy intake was reduced while carcass lipid content was | |||
increased in the three fat-fed groups." "These results indicate that enrichment of the diet with | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids causes changes in adipose tissue metabolism that favour fat deposition. | |||
Different metabolic pathways were preferentially affected by each type of fatty acid used." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Adv Exp Med Biol 266:3-15, 1989, <strong>"Lipofuscin and ceroid formation: the cellular recycling | |||
system,"</strong> Harman, D. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 2001 Apr 15;122(4):427-43. <strong>Effect of the degree of fatty acid unsaturation of rat | |||
heart mitochondria on their rates of H2O2 production and lipid and protein oxidative damage.</strong> | |||
Herrero A, Portero-Otin M, Bellmunt MJ, Pamplona R, Barja G. "Previous comparative studies have shown that | |||
long-lived animals have lower fatty acid double bond content in their mitochondrial membranes than | |||
short-lived ones. In order to ascertain whether this trait protects mitochondria by decreasing lipid and | |||
protein oxidation and oxygen radical generation, the double bond content of rat heart mitochondrial | |||
membranes was manipulated by chronic feeding with semi-purified AIN-93G diets rich in highly unsaturated | |||
(UNSAT) or saturated (SAT) oils. UNSAT rat heart mitochondria had significantly higher double bond content | |||
and lipid peroxidation than SAT mitochondria. They also showed increased levels of the markers of protein | |||
oxidative damage malondialdehyde-lysine, protein carbonyls, and N(e)-(carboxymethyl)lysine adducts." "These | |||
results demonstrate that increasing the degree of fatty acid unsaturation of heart mitochondria increases | |||
oxidative damage to their lipids and proteins, and can also increase their rates of mitochondrial oxygen | |||
radical generation in situations in which the degree of reduction of Complex III is higher than normal. | |||
These observations strengthen the notion that the relatively low double bond content of the membranes of | |||
long-lived animals could have evolved to protect them from oxidative damage." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biochem J. 1994 May 15;300 ( Pt 1):251-5. <strong>Regulation of fibrinolysis by non-esterified fatty | |||
acids.</strong> Higazi AA, Aziza R, Samara AA, Mayer M. "Examination of the fatty acid specificity | |||
showed that a minimal chain length of 16 carbon atoms and the presence of at least one double bond, | |||
preferably in a cis configuration, were required for inhibition of the fibrinolytic activity of plasmin." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
B. A. Houssay and C. Martinez, <strong>"Experimental diabetes and diet,"</strong> | |||
Science 105, 548-549, 1947. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Theor Biol. 2005 May 21;234(2):277-88. <strong>On the importance of fatty acid composition of membranes | |||
for aging.</strong> Hulbert AJ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev. 2006 Apr 16; <strong>Extended longevity of wild-derived mice is associated with | |||
peroxidation-resistant membranes. | |||
</strong> | |||
Hulbert AJ, Faulks SC, Harper JM, Miller RA, Buffenstein R. "Muscle and liver phospholipids from these | |||
long-living mice lines have a reduced amount of the highly polyunsaturated omega-3 docosahexaenoic acid | |||
compared to the DC mice, and consequently their membranes are less likely to peroxidative damage. The | |||
relationship between maximum longevity and membrane peroxidation index is similar for these mice lines as | |||
previously observed for mammals in general. It is suggested that peroxidation-resistant membranes may be an | |||
important component of extended longevity." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol. 1975 Nov 21;19(3):239-54.<strong> | |||
[Ultrastructure and morphogenesis of ceroid pigment. II. Late changes of lysosomes in Kupffer cells of | |||
rat liver after phagocytosis of unsaturated lipids] | |||
</strong> | |||
Kajihara H, Totovic V, Gedigk P. "These lipids, which have been changed in their molecular structure, cannot | |||
be hydrolized by lysosomal enzymes. They remain as an indigestible material, as a waste product in lysosomal | |||
residual bodies. Both lipofuscin and ceroid are lysosomal structures containing oxidized and polymerized | |||
lipids." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Reprod Nutr Dev. 1998 Jan-Feb;38(1):31-7. <strong>Effect of a high linoleic acid diet on delta 9-desaturase | |||
activity, lipogenesis and lipid composition of pig subcutaneous adipose tissue.</strong> Kouba M, Mourot | |||
J. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Gerontology 1993;39(1):7-18.<strong> | |||
Modulation of membrane phospholipid fatty acid composition by age and food restriction.</strong> | |||
Laganiere S, Yu BP. H.M. "Phospholipids from liver mitochondrial and microsomal membrane preparations were | |||
analyzed to further assess the effects of age and lifelong calorie restriction on membrane lipid | |||
composition." "The data revealed characteristic patterns of age-related changes in ad libitum (AL) fed rats: | |||
membrane levels of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, 22:4 and 22:5, increased progressively, while | |||
membrane linoleic acid (18:2) decreased steadily with age. Levels of 18:2 fell by approximately 40%, and | |||
22:5 content almost doubled making the peroxidizability index increase with age." "We concluded that the | |||
membrane-stabilizing action of long-term calorie restriction relates to the selective modification of | |||
membrane long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids during aging." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Free Radic Biol Med 1999 Feb;26(3-4):260-5. <strong>Modulation of cardiac mitochondrial membrane fluidity by | |||
age and calorie intake.</strong> Lee J, Yu BP, Herlihy JT. "The fatty acid composition of the | |||
mitochondrial membranes of the two ad lib fed groups differed: the long-chain polyunsaturated 22:4 fatty | |||
acid was higher in the older group, although linoleic acid (18:2) was lower. DR eliminated the differences." | |||
"Considered together, these results suggest that DR maintains the integrity of the cardiac mitochondrial | |||
membrane fluidity by minimizing membrane damage through modulation of membrane fatty acid profile." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lipids 2001 Jun;36(6):589-93. <strong>Effect of dietary restriction on age-related increase of liver | |||
susceptibility to peroxidation in rats.</strong> Leon TI, Lim BO, Yu BP, Lim Y, Jeon EJ, Park DK. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lipids 22(3), 133-6, 1987. <strong>Effects of parenteral nutrition with high doses of linoleate on the | |||
developing human liver and brain,</strong> Martinez, M., and A. Ballabriga. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1995 Jan;272(1):469-75. <strong>Acetic acid-induced colitis in normal and essential | |||
fatty acid deficient rats.</strong> Mascolo N, Izzo AA, Autore G, Maiello FM, Di Carlo G, Capasso F. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biochem Pharmacol. 1990 Mar 1;39(5):879-89. <strong>Histamine release from rat mast cells induced by | |||
metabolic activation of polyunsaturated fatty acids into free radicals.</strong> Masini E, Palmerani B, | |||
Gambassi F, Pistelli A, Giannella E, Occupati B, Ciuffi M, Sacchi TB, Mannaioni PF. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Nutrit 10:63(1935). <strong>The effect of retarded growth upon length of the life span and upon the | |||
ultimate body size.</strong> McCay, CM., Crowell, MF., and Maynard, LA. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
McCollum EV. 1957. <strong>A History of Nutrition.</strong> Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p 374. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem. 2003 Oct 24;278(43):42012-9. <strong>Pyridoxamine traps intermediates in lipid peroxidation | |||
reactions in vivo: evidence on the role of lipids in chemical modification of protein and development of | |||
diabetic complications.</strong> | |||
Metz TO, Alderson NL, Chachich ME, Thorpe SR, Baynes JW. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
FEBS Lett. 1998 Oct 16;437(1-2):24-8. <strong>Generation of protein carbonyls by glycoxidation and | |||
lipoxidation reactions with autoxidation products of ascorbic acid and polyunsaturated fatty acids. | |||
</strong> | |||
Miyata T, Inagi R, Asahi K, Yamada Y, Horie K, Sakai H, Uchida K, Kurokawa K. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 1996 Jul;354(2):109-19. <strong>Exposure to the n-3 polyunsaturated | |||
fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid impairs alpha 1-adrenoceptor-mediated contractile responses and inositol | |||
phosphate formation in rat cardiomyocytes.</strong> Reithmann C, Scheininger C, Bulgan T, Werdan K. "The | |||
results presented show that <strong>chronic n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid pretreatment of rat | |||
cardiomyocytes leads to a marked impairment of alpha 1-adrenoceptor-induced positive inotropic effects | |||
and induction of arrhythmias concomitant with a n-3 fatty acid-induced decrease in IP3 formation." | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nutrition. 2000 Jan;16(1):11-4<strong>. Effects of eicosapentaenoic acid intake on plasma fibrinolytic and | |||
coagulation activity by using physical load in the young.</strong> Sakamoto N, Nishiike T, Iguchi H, | |||
Sakamoto K. "<strong>Thus, as determined by the load, a small amount of daily EPA intake clearly decreased | |||
fibrinolytic activity and increased coagulation activity."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Diabetes. 2005 Aug;54(8):2314-9. <strong>Insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes in high-fat-fed mice are | |||
linked to high glycotoxin intake.</strong> Sandu O, Song K, Cai W, Zheng F, Uribarri J, Vlassara H. | |||
"These results demonstrate that the development of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes during prolonged | |||
high-fat feeding are linked to the excess AGEs/advanced lipoxidation end products inherent in fatty diets." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nutr Cancer 1998;30(2):137-43. <strong>Effects of dietary n-3-to-n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid ratio on | |||
mammary carcinogenesis in rats.</strong> Sasaki T, Kobayashi Y, Shimizu J, Wada M, In'nami S, Kanke Y, | |||
Takita T. "Dietary fat was fed to the rats as 10% of the total feed weight, starting two weeks before the | |||
initiation. An increase in the n-3/n-6 ratio did not suppress the incidence or reduce the latency of mammary | |||
tumor development. The number and weight of mammary tumors per tumor-bearing rat tended to be large in the | |||
group with an n-3/n-6 ratio of 7.84 compared with those in the other groups. <strong>As the n-3/n-6 ratios | |||
were elevated, the total number and weight of tumors increased gradually."</strong> "These results | |||
suggested that the increase in the n-3/n-6 ratio of dietary fat with the fixed PUFA-to-saturated fatty acid | |||
ratio cannot suppress the mammary carcinogenesis but can promote development of tumors, despite reduced PGE2 | |||
concentration in the tumor." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Cardiovasc Pharmacol. 2006 Mar;47(3):493-9. <strong>Mildronate, a novel fatty acid oxidation inhibitor and | |||
antianginal agent, reduces myocardial infarct size without affecting hemodynamics.</strong> Sesti C, | |||
Simkhovich BZ, Kalvinsh I, Kloner RA. "Mildronate is a fatty acid oxidation inhibitor approved as an | |||
antianginal drug in parts of Europe." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Nutr 2000 Dec;130(12):3028-33. <strong>Polyunsaturated (n-3) fatty acids susceptible to peroxidation are | |||
increased in plasma and tissue lipids of rats fed docosahexaenoic acid-containing oils.</strong> Song | |||
JH, Fujimoto K, Miyazawa T.. "Thus, high incorporation of (n-3) fatty acids (mainly DHA) into plasma and | |||
tissue lipids due to DHA-containing oil ingestion may undesirably affect tissues by enhancing susceptibility | |||
of membranes to lipid peroxidation and by disrupting the antioxidant system." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Diabetes Nutr Metab. 2002 Aug;15(4):205-14. <strong>Long-term effect of fish oil diet on basal and | |||
stimulated plasma glucose and insulin levels in ob/ob mice.</strong> | |||
Steerenberg PA, Beekhof PK, Feskens EJ, Lips CJ, Hoppener JW, Beems RB. "We have investigated, in comparison | |||
to low and high fat diets, the effect of a fish oil diet on basal and stimulated plasma glucose and insulin | |||
levels in male and female ob/ob mice." "Intercurrent deaths were found especially in the fish oil diet | |||
group. Compared to the other diet groups, plasma insulin levels of the fish oil diet group were | |||
significantly increased 3 months after the start of the diet and remained higher for another 3 months." "At | |||
12 months, microscopy revealed an increased severity of hepatic brown pigment accumulation and | |||
extramedullary haematopoiesis in the spleen of mice fed with fish oil." "Fish oil diet also increased | |||
intercurrent mortality. However, a consistent course of death could not be established using morphological | |||
parameters." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem. 2002 Feb 15;277(7):5692-7. <strong>Unsaturated fatty acids inhibit cholesterol efflux from | |||
macrophages by increasing degradation of ATP-binding cassette transporter A1.</strong> Wang Y, Oram JF. | |||
"These findings raise the possibility that an increased supply of unsaturated fatty acids in the artery wall | |||
promotes atherogenesis by impairing the ABCA1 cholesterol secretory pathway in macrophages." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem. 2005 Oct 28;280(43):35896-903. Epub 2005 Aug 23. <strong>Unsaturated fatty acids phosphorylate | |||
and destabilize ABCA1 through a phospholipase D2 pathway.</strong> Wang Y, Oram JF. "ATP-binding | |||
cassette transporter ABCA1 mediates the transport of cholesterol and phospholipids from cells to HDL | |||
apolipoproteins and thus modulates HDL levels and atherogenesis. Unsaturated fatty acids, which are elevated | |||
in diabetes, impair the ABCA1 pathway in cultured cells by destabilizing ABCA1 protein." "Unsaturated but | |||
not saturated fatty acids stimulated phospholipase D (PLD) activity, the PLD inhibitor 1-butanol prevented | |||
the unsaturated fatty acid-induced reduction in ABCA1 levels, and the PLD2 activator mastoparan markedly | |||
reduced ABCA1 protein levels, implicating a role for PLD2 in the ABCA1 destabilizing effects of fatty | |||
acids." "These data provide evidence that intracellular unsaturated acyl-CoA derivatives destabilize ABCA1 | |||
by activating a PLD2 signaling pathway." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Isr J Med Sci. 1996 Nov;32(11):1134-43. <strong>Diet and disease--the Israeli paradox: possible dangers of a | |||
high omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid diet.</strong> Yam D, Eliraz A, Berry EM. "Thus, rather than | |||
being beneficial, high omega-6 PUFA diets may have some long-term side effects, within the cluster of | |||
hyperinsulinemia, atherosclerosis and tumorigenesis." | |||
</p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2007. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Vegetables, etc."Who Defines Food?</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Vegetables, etc."Who Defines Food? | |||
</h1> | |||
<em><p> | |||
Since bacteria in the rumens of cows destroy unsaturated fatty acids, but don't harm vitamin E, it seems | |||
reasonable to suppose that beef and milk would have a better ratio of vitamin E to unsaturated fats than | |||
do the plants eaten by the cows. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Toxic pesticides are found in higher concentrations in the urine and fat of slaughtered animals than in | |||
their livers, since the livers are detoxifying the chemicals and causing them to be excreted. | |||
Presumably, the animals' livers will perform the same detoxification reactions with the <strong | |||
>phytotoxicants that occur naturally in their diet.</strong> | |||
</p></em> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
Not long ago, breast feeding was socially unacceptable in the United States, and several manufacturers were | |||
teaching the world"s poorest women to use their baby-food formulas even when there was no clean water for | |||
its preparation. Industrialists have campaigned to convince the public that their by-products, from | |||
cotton-seed oil to shrimp shells, are "health foods." In several parts of the world, desperately poor people | |||
sometimes eat clay, and even clay has been promoted as a health food. Almost anything becomes "food," when | |||
people are under economic and social pressure. If these things aren"t acutely toxic, they can become part of | |||
our "normal" diet. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Our instincts give us a few clues about our nutritional needs, such as thirst, the hunger for salt, the | |||
pleasantness of sweet things, and the unpleasantness of certain odors or very acrid or bitter tastes. People | |||
who are constitutionally unable to taste certain bitter chemicals find certain vegetables less | |||
objectionable; their instinctive guidance has become less clear. But within the boundaries of cravings and | |||
disgust, habits and customs become the dominant forces in diet. "Professional dietitians" and other | |||
"experts" primarily function as enforcers of cultural prejudice. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The manufacturers of pureed vegetables for babies used to put large amounts of salt, sugar, and monosodium | |||
glutamate into their products, because the added chemicals served as instinctual signals that made the | |||
material somewhat acceptable to the babies. There was no scientific basis for providing these vegetables to | |||
babies in a form that they would accept, but it was a profitable practice that was compatible with the | |||
social pressure against prolonged breast feeding. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Poor people, especially in the spring when other foods were scarce, have sometimes subsisted on foliage such | |||
as collard and poke greens, usually made more palatable by cooking them with flavorings, such as a little | |||
bacon grease and lots of salt. Eventually, "famine foods" can be accepted as dietary staples. The fact that | |||
cows, sheep, goats and deer can thrive on a diet of foliage shows that leaves contain essential nutrients. | |||
Their minerals, vitamins, and amino acids are suitable for sustaining most animal life, if a sufficient | |||
quantity is eaten. But when people try to live primarily on foliage, as in famines, they soon suffer from a | |||
great variety of diseases. Various leaves contain antimetabolic substances that prevent the assimilation of | |||
the nutrients, and only very specifically adapted digestive systems (or technologies) can overcome those | |||
toxic effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some plants have specific "pests," such as insects, that have adapted to be resistant to that plant"s | |||
toxins, but if the plant and its predator are to survive, there has to be a balance between the plant | |||
tissue"s digestibility and its toxicity. Injury of a plant stimulates it to make increased amounts of its | |||
defensive chemicals. Plant toxins are known to be specific for animal tissues; for example, a toxin will | |||
inhibit the action of an enzyme from an animal, but a plant enzyme that catalyzes the same reaction won"t be | |||
affected. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Plant defensive chemicals can have beneficial uses as drugs. Plants are important sources for chemicals used | |||
in chemotherapy of cancer, with the purpose of stopping cell division. Other plant drugs can stimulate cell | |||
division. The drug from one plant will sometimes protect cells against the toxic effects of another plant. | |||
The use of any drug that isn"t a natural part of animal physiology will have many biological effects, so | |||
that a beneficial drug action will usually be accompanied by unwanted side-effects. An antioxidant may turn | |||
out to disrupt the endocrine system, an antiinflammatory drug may be mutagenic or carcinogenic. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A particular plant will have a variety of defensive chemicals, with specific functions. Underground, the | |||
plant"s roots and tubers are susceptible to attack by fungi and nematodes. The leaves, stems, and seeds are | |||
susceptible to attack by insects, birds, and grazing animals. Since the plant"s seeds are of unique | |||
importance to the plant, and contain a high concentration of nutrients, they must have special protection. | |||
Sometimes this consists of a hard shell, and sometimes of chemicals that inhibit the animal"s digestive | |||
enzymes. Many plants have evolved fruits that provide concentrated food for animals, and that serve to | |||
distribute the seeds widely, as when a bird eats a berry, and excretes the undigested seed at a great | |||
distance. If the fruit were poisonous, it wouldn"t serve the plant"s purpose so well. In general, the | |||
plant"s most intense toxins are in its seeds, and the fruits, when mature, generally contain practically no | |||
toxins. Roots contain chemicals that inhibit microorganisms, but because they aren"t easily accessible by | |||
grazing animals and insects, they don"t contain the digestive inhibitors that are more concentrated in the | |||
above-ground organs of the plant. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The toxins of plants include phenols, tannins, lectins/agglutinins, and trypsin-inhibitors, besides | |||
innumerable more specific metabolic inhibitors, including "anti-vitamins." Unsaturated fats themselves are | |||
important defenses, since they inhibit trypsin and other proteolytic enzymes, preventing the assimilation of | |||
the proteins that are present in seeds and leaves, and disrupting all biological processes that depend on | |||
protein breakdown, such as the formation of thyroid hormone and the removal of blood clots. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Generally, fruits, roots, and tubers provide a high concentration of nutrients along with low concentrations | |||
of toxic antimetabolic substances. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While nutritional reference tables often show fruits and potatoes as having about 2% protein content, while | |||
nuts, grains, and legumes are shown with a high protein content, often in the range of 15% to 40%, they | |||
neglect to point out that fruits and potatoes have a very high water content, while that of the seeds is | |||
extremely low. The protein content of milk is about 3%, which according to the charts would suggest that it | |||
is inferior to beans and grains. In fact, the protein value of grain is negligible, mainly because seeds | |||
contain their protein in a storage form, that is extremely rich in nitrogen, but poor in essential amino | |||
acids. Special preparation is needed to reduce the toxicity of seeds, and in the case of beans, these | |||
methods are never very satisfactory. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides their specific defensive toxins and antimetabolites, plants are major sources of allergens. The | |||
allergenicity of a food depends on the sensitivity of the individual, as well as on the growth conditions of | |||
the plant. The use of extremely toxic pesticides has affected both the crops and the sensitivity of the | |||
human population to allergens. Sensitivities induced originally by toxic pesticides used on certain crops | |||
can probably persist after the industrial chemical has been eliminated, because the immune system is | |||
susceptible to "conditioning." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many types of phytochemicals are mutagenic, and some of those are carcinogenic. Bruce Ames, at the | |||
University of California, devised a method of screening for mutagens, using bacteria. One of his graduate | |||
students using the technique found that the flame retardants in children's pajamas and bedding were powerful | |||
mutagens, and were probably causing cancer. That event made Ames a celebrity, and in the 1980s he went on a | |||
lecture tour supported by the American Cancer Society. His lectures reflected the doctrine of the A.C.S., | |||
that industrial chemicals aren't responsible for cancer, but that individual actions, such as smoking or | |||
dietary choices, are the main causes of cancer. He used a fraudulently "age adjusted" graph of cancer | |||
mortality, that falsely showed that mortality from all types of cancer except lung cancer had leveled off | |||
after the A.C.S. came into existence. He described tests in which he had compared DDT to extracts of food | |||
herbs, and found DDT to be less mutagenic than several of the most commonly used flavoring herbs. His | |||
message, which was eagerly received by his audience of chemistry and biology professors, was that we should | |||
not worry about environmental pollution, because it's not as harmful as the things that we do to ourselves. | |||
He said that if everyone would eat more unsaturated vegetable oil, and didn't smoke, they wouldn't have | |||
anything to worry about. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For me, the significance of his experiment was that plants contain natural pesticides that should be taken | |||
more seriously, without taking industrial toxins less seriously. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Technologies have been invented to convert vegetation into digestible protein, but at our present scientific | |||
and technological level, it"s better to simply minimize our use of the more toxic foods, and to direct more | |||
effort toward the elimination of the conditions that produce famine. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Animal proteins, and fruits, because they contain the lowest levels of toxins, should form the basis of the | |||
diet. Not all fruits, of course, are perfectly safe--avocados, for example, contain so much unsaturated fat | |||
that they can be carcinogenic and hepatotoxic. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Protein deficiency itself contributes to the harm done by toxins, since the liver"s ability to detoxify them | |||
depends on adequate nutrition, especially good protein. In the 1940s, Biskind"s experiments showed that | |||
protein deficiency leads to the accumulation of estrogen, because the liver normally inactivates all the | |||
estrogen in the blood as it passes through the liver. This applies to phytoestrogens and industrial | |||
estrogens as well as to the natural estrogens of the body. At a certain point, the increased estrogen and | |||
decreased thyroid and progesterone cause infertility, but before that point is reached, the hyperestrogenism | |||
causes a great variety of birth defects. Deformities of the male genitals, and later, testicular cancer in | |||
the sons and breast cancer in the daughters, are produced by the combination of toxins and nutritional | |||
deficiencies. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Onderstepoort J Vet Res 1989 Jun;56(2):145-6. <strong>Thiaminase activities and thiamine content of | |||
Pteridium aquilinum, Equisetum ramosissimum, Malva parviflora, Pennisetum clandestinum and Medicago | |||
sativa.</strong> Meyer P Animal and Dairy Science Research Institute, Private Bag, Irene. Thiaminase | |||
type 1 and 2 activities and thiamine content of five plants were determined. Of these Pteridium aquilinum | |||
and Equisetum ramosissimum were found to have considerably more thiaminase activity and lower thiamine | |||
content than Malva parviflora, Pennisetum clandestinum and Medicago sativa. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nature 1994 Apr 21;368(6473):683-4.<strong> Mystery of the poisoned expedition.</strong> | |||
Earl JW, McCleary BV Department of Biochemistry, Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Camperdown, Sydney, | |||
New South Wales, Australia. The Burke and Wills expedition through the interior of Australia in the | |||
nineteenth century ended in calamity. But the cause of death was more pernicious than anyone at the time had | |||
imagined: beriberi due to thiaminase poisoning. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Comment in: Nature 1994 Aug 11; 370(6489):408. Aust Vet J 1992 Jul;69(7):165-7. <strong> | |||
Mechanisms underlying Phalaris aquatica "sudden death" syndrome in sheep.</strong> Bourke CA, Carrigan | |||
MJ New South Wales Agriculture, Agricultural Research and Veterinary Centre, Orange. Twenty outbreaks of | |||
Phalaris aquatica "sudden death" syndrome in sheep were investigated between 1981 and 1991. Four were | |||
confirmed and one was suspected, to be a cardiac disorder; 5 were confirmed and 3 were suspected, to be a | |||
polioencephalomalacic disorder; the aetiology of the remaining 7 outbreaks could not be determined. | |||
Potentially toxic levels of hydrocyanic acid (20 to 36 mg/100 g) were measured in the 3 toxic phalaris | |||
pastures tested. The measurement of potentially toxic levels of nitrate nitrogen (2920 micrograms/g) in | |||
toxic phalaris pastures by others, was noted. It is suggested that phalaris "sudden death" syndrome could | |||
have as many as 4 different underlying mechanisms, and<strong> | |||
that these might reflect the presence in the plant of a cardio-respiratory toxin, a thiaminase and amine | |||
co-substate, cyanogenic compounds, and nitrate compounds.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Indian J Med Res 1991 Oct;94:378-83. <strong>Genotoxic effects of some foods & food components in Swiss | |||
mice.</strong> Balachandran B, Sivaswamy SN, Sivaramakrishnan VM Isotope Division, Cancer Institute, | |||
Madras. A number of commonly consumed foods and food components in south India were<strong> | |||
screened for their genotoxic effects on Swiss mice. Salted, sundried and oil fried vegetables and fishes | |||
induced chromosomal aberrations, sperm head abnormalities and micronuclei production, which were | |||
comparable to the effect of the positive control viz., 20-methylcholanthrene. Spices like Cissus</strong | |||
> quadrangularis (an indigenous herb used in certain south Indian dishes) and pyrolysed cumin and aniseeds | |||
showed moderate effects. Calamus oil, widely used in pharmaceuticals was highly effective. All the three | |||
parameters of genotoxicity gave similar results. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In Vivo 1998 Nov-Dec;12(6):675-89. <strong>Comparative anticancer effects of vaccination and dietary factors | |||
on experimentally-induced cancers.</strong> | |||
Zusman I Laboratory of Teratology and Experimental Oncology, Koret School of Veterinary Medicine, Faculty of | |||
Agriculture, Food and Environmental Quality Sciences, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot, Israel. The | |||
role of two major factors were analyzed in the prevention of experimentally-induced cancers: a) vaccination | |||
of animals with polyclonal IgG generated against the soluble p53 antigen and b) feeding of animals with | |||
diets rich with dietary fibers or fat. a) In vaccination, a few attempts have been made to utilize p53 | |||
protein as a tumor suppressor. IgG generated against the cytoplasmic, soluble p53 antigen from tumor-bearing | |||
rats prevents the carcinogenic effect of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH) decreasing significantly the number of | |||
tumor-bearing rats in vaccinated group compared with non vaccinated controls and preventing benign tumors | |||
from becoming malignant. The antitumor effect of vaccination is accompanied by a significant increase in the | |||
serum-level of p53 antigen in vaccinated rats compared with non vaccinated controls. The immune response of | |||
a host to vaccination activates the lymph components of the spleen, and this activation is manifested by the | |||
multiplication of the number of lymphocytes which are generated against specific antigens. This | |||
multiplication is achieved by the higher division of the antigen-specific lymphoblasts with their subsequent | |||
transformation into plasma cells. These cells synthesize the specific protein (IgG). One such protein is the | |||
tumor-associated p53 protein, which is synthesized by rats against rabbit anti-p53 IgG. b) The role of | |||
dietary factors in the prevention of chemically induced cancer was reviewed on two models: the role of high | |||
fiber diets in prevention of colon cancer, and <strong>the role of high fat diets in the prevention of | |||
mammary gland cancer.</strong> Experiments in colon cancer showed that 20% cellulose decreased | |||
significantly tumor incidence caused by DMH. The tumor-preventive effect of a cellulose diet was accompanied | |||
by increased enzyme concentrations, such as ornithine decarboxylase, thymidine kinase and | |||
beta-glucuronidase. This effect was accompanied by activation of some cellular mechanisms, i.e. apoptosis, | |||
proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and p53 protein synthesis. <strong>Experiments in mammary glands | |||
cancer showed that a 15% olive-oil diet reduced significantly the tumor incidence caused by | |||
9,10-dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene. The antitumor effect of the olive-oil diet was connected to its | |||
content of monounsaturated fatty acids, such as oleic and palmitic acids. The promotive tumorigenic | |||
effects of other high-fat diets (avocado, soybeans) were associated with high content of some | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acids (linoleic and alpha-linolenic).</strong> Different diets have different | |||
targets. The effect of the same diet depends on its anti-tumor substances content. CONCLUSIONS: Vaccination | |||
and some diets have similar mechanism in their tumor-preventive effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ann Nutr Metab 1991;35(5):253-60.<strong> | |||
Effect of dietary avocado oils on hepatic collagen metabolism</strong>. Wermam MJ, Mokady S, Neeman I | |||
Department of Food Engineering and Biotechnology, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa. The | |||
effect of various avocado and soybean oils on collagen metabolism in the liver was studied in growing female | |||
rats for 8 weeks and in day-old chicks for 1 week. In comparison with rats fed either refined avocado oil, | |||
refined or unrefined soybean oils, rats fed <strong>unrefined avocado oil showed a significant decrease in | |||
total collagen solubility | |||
</strong> | |||
in the liver, while there were no changes in total collagen, protein and moisture content. Chicks fed | |||
unrefined avocado oil as compared to those fed refined avocado oil also showed a decrease in hepatic total | |||
soluble collagen while hepatic total collagen remained unaffected. Electron micrographs and light-microscope | |||
examinations of rats' liver revealed<strong> | |||
collagen accumulation in the periportal location. This is suggestive of the early stages of | |||
fibrosis.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Life Sci 1997;60(19):1635-41. <strong>L-canaline: a potent antimetabolite and anti-cancer agent from | |||
leguminous plants.</strong> Rosenthal GA Laboratory of Biochemical Ecology, University of Kentucky, | |||
Lexington 40506, USA. <a href="mailto:garose@ukcc.uky.edu" target="_blank">garose@ukcc.uky.edu</a> | |||
L-Canaline, the L-2-amino-4-(aminooxy)butyric acid structural analog of L-ornithine' is a powerful | |||
antimetabolite stored in many leguminous plants. This nonprotein amino acid <strong>reacts vigorously with | |||
the pyridoxal phosphate moiety of vitamin B6-containing enzymes to form a covalently-bound oxime that | |||
inactivates, often irreversibly, the enzyme. | |||
</strong> | |||
Canaline is not only capable of inhibiting ornithine-dependent enzymic activity, but it also can function as | |||
a lysine antagonist. Recently, this natural product was found to possess significant antineoplastic in vitro | |||
activity against human pancreatic cancer cells. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Food Chem Toxicol 1999 May;37(5):481-91. <strong>Occurrence of emodin, chrysophanol and physcion in | |||
vegetables, herbs and liquors. Genotoxicity and anti-genotoxicity of the anthraquinones and of the whole | |||
plants.</strong> Mueller SO, Schmitt M, Dekant W, Stopper H, Schlatter J, Schreier P, Lutz WK Department | |||
of Toxicology, University of Wurzburg, Germany.<strong> | |||
1,8-Dihydroxyanthraquinones, present in laxatives, fungi imperfecti, Chinese herbs and possibly | |||
vegetables, are in debate as human carcinogens. We screened a variety of vegetables (cabbage lettuce, | |||
beans, peas), some herbs and herbal-flavoured liquors for their content of the 'free' anthraquinones | |||
emodin, chrysophanol and physcion. For qualitative and quantitative analysis, reversed-phase HPLC | |||
(RP-LC), gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and RP-LC-MS were used. The vegetables showed a | |||
large batch-to-batch variability, from 0.04 to 3.6, 5.9 and 36 mg total anthraquinone per kg fresh | |||
weight in peas, cabbage lettuce, and beans,</strong> | |||
respectively. Physcion predominated in all vegetables. <strong>In the herbs grape vine leaves, couch grass | |||
root and plantain herb, anthraquinones were above the limit of detection. Contents ranged below 1 | |||
mg/kg</strong> (dry weight). All three anthraquinones were also found in seven of 11 herbal-flavoured | |||
liquors, in a range of 0.05 mg/kg to 7.6 mg/kg. The genotoxicity of the analysed anthraquinones was | |||
investigated in the comet assay, the micronucleus test and the mutation assay in mouse lymphoma L5178Y | |||
tk+/-<strong> | |||
cells. Emodin was genotoxic, whereas chrysophanol and physcion showed no effects. Complete vegetable | |||
extract on its own did not show any effect in the micronucleus test. A lettuce extract completely | |||
abolished the induction of micronuclei by the genotoxic anthraquinone danthron. Taking into | |||
consideration</strong> the measured concentrations of anthraquinones, estimated daily intakes, the | |||
genotoxic potency, as well as protective effects of the food matrix, the analysed constituents do not | |||
represent a high priority genotoxic risk in a balanced human diet. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Food Sci Nutr 1998 Sep;49(5):343-52. <strong>Lipid content and fatty acid composition in foods | |||
commonly consumed by nursing Congolese women: incidences on their essential fatty acid intakes and | |||
breast milk fatty acids.</strong> | |||
Rocquelin G, Tapsoba S, Mbemba F, Gallon G, Picq C Tropical Nutrition Unit, ORSTOM, Montpellier, France. The | |||
fat content and fatty acid (FA) composition of nearly 40 foods, currently consumed by 102 nursing Congolese | |||
mothers living in Brazzaville, were determined to assess their impact on mothers' essential fatty acid (EFA) | |||
intakes and breast milk FA. Data on mothers' milk FA and dietary habits which allowed food selection were | |||
recently published (Rocquelin et al., 1998). Most foods were locally produced. Food samples were collected | |||
at local markets, bleached if necessary to avoid microbial degradation, and stored at +4 degrees C or -20 | |||
degrees C. They were lyophilized upon their arrival in the laboratory before lipid analyses. FA composition | |||
of food lipids was determined by capillary gas chromatography. Staple diets included low-fat, | |||
high-carbohydrate foods (processed cassava roots, wheat bread) and high-polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) | |||
foods: soybean oil (high in 18 : 2 n-6 and alpha-18 : 3 n-3), bushbutter<strong> | |||
(dacryodes edulis), peanuts, avocado (high in fat and 18 : 2 n-6), freshwater</strong> | |||
and salt-water fish (high in LC n-3 and/or n-6 PUFA), and leafy green vegetables<strong> | |||
(low in fat but very high in alpha-18 : 3 n-3). Their frequent consumption by</strong> nursing mothers | |||
provided enough EFA to meet requirements due to lactation. It<strong> | |||
also explains why mothers' breast milk was rich in C8-C14 saturated FA (26% of</strong> total FA) and in | |||
n-6, n-3 PUFA (respectively 15.0% and 2.4% of total FA) highly profitable for breastfed infants' | |||
development. From this point of view, dietary habits of Congolese mothers have to be sustained for they are | |||
more adequate than most Western-type diets. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Med Oncol Tumor Pharmacother 1990;7(2-3):69-85.<strong> | |||
Dietary carcinogens, environmental pollution, and cancer: some misconceptions.</strong> Ames BN, Gold LS | |||
Division of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of California, Berkeley 94720. Various | |||
misconceptions about dietary carcinogens, pesticide residues, and cancer<strong> | |||
causation are discussed. The pesticides in our diet are 99.99% natural, since plants make an enormous | |||
variety of toxins against fungi, insects, and animal predators. Although only 50 of these natural | |||
pesticides have been tested in</strong> animal cancer tests, about half of them are carcinogens. About | |||
half of all chemicals tested in animal cancer tests are positive. The proportion of natural pesticides | |||
positive in animal tests of clastogenicity is also the same as for synthetic chemicals. It is argued that | |||
testing chemicals in animals at the maximum tolerated dose primarily measures chronic cell proliferation, a | |||
threshold process. Cell proliferation is mutagenic in several ways, including inducing mitotic | |||
recombination, and therefore chronic induction of cell proliferation is a risk factor for cancer. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1980 Aug;77(8):4961-5. <strong>Fecalase: a model for activation of dietary | |||
glycosides to mutagens by intestinal flora.</strong> Tamura G, Gold C, Ferro-Luzzi A, Ames BN Many | |||
substances in the plant kingdom and in man's diet occur as glycosides. Recent studies have indicated that | |||
many glycosides that are not mutagenic in tests such as the Salmonella test become mutagenic upon hydrolysis | |||
of the glycosidic linkages. The Salmonella test utilizes a liver homogenate to approximate mammalian | |||
metabolism but does not provide a source of the enzymes present in intestinal bacterial flora that hydrolyze | |||
the wide variety of glycosides present in nature. We describe a stable cell-free extract of human feces, | |||
fecalase, which is shown to contain various glycosidases that allow the in vitro activation of many natural | |||
glycosides to mutagens in the Salmonella/liver homogenate test. Many beverages, such as red wine (but | |||
apparently not white wine) and tea, contain glycosides of the mutagne quercetin. Red wine, red grape juice, | |||
and tea were mutagenic in the test when fecalase was added, and red wine contained considerable direct | |||
mutagenic activity in the absence of fecalase. The implications of quercetin mutagenicity and | |||
carcinogenicity are discussed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Br J Rheumatol 1994 Aug;33(8):790-1. <strong>Even garlic.</strong> Sweetman BJ | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nutr Cancer 1988;11(4):251-7. <strong>Cytotoxicity of extracts of spices to cultured cells.</strong> | |||
Unnikrishnan MC, Kuttan R Amala Cancer Research Centre, Kerala, India. The cytotoxicity of the extracts from | |||
eight different spices used in the Indian diet was determined using Dalton's lymphoma ascites tumor cells | |||
and human lymphocytes in vitro and Chinese Hamster Ovary cells and Vero cells in tissue culture. Alcoholic | |||
extracts of the spices were found to be more cytotoxic to these cells than their aqueous extracts. Alcoholic | |||
extracts of several spices inhibited cell growth at concentrations of 0.2-1 mg/ml in vitro and 0.12-0.3 | |||
mg/ml in tissue culture.<strong> | |||
Ginger, pippali (native to India; also called dried catkins), pepper, and garlic showed the highest | |||
activity followed by asafetida, mustard, and horse-gram (native to India). These extracts also inhibited | |||
the thymidine uptake into DNA.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Toxicol Sci 1984 Feb;9(1):77-86.<strong> | |||
[Mutagenicity and cytotoxicity tests of garlic]. [</strong>Article in Japanese] Yoshida S, Hirao Y, | |||
Nakagawa S Mutagenicity and cytotoxicity of fresh juice and alcohol extract from garlic were studied by | |||
Ames' test, Rec assay, Micronucleus test and the check of the influence to HEp 2 and chinese hamster embryo | |||
(CHE) primary cultured cells. No evidence of mutagenicity of these samples were observed in Ames' test and | |||
Rec assay, while there was dose dependent increase of micronucleated cells and polychromatocytes on the bone | |||
marrow cells of mice and chinese hamsters treated with garlic juice. There were severe damages, e.g. growth | |||
inhibition and morphological changes of both cultured cells due to garlic juice, but no or slightly | |||
cytotoxic signs were observed even in high concentration of garlic extract. A higher sensitivity to the | |||
cytotoxic effects of garlic was seen by the present findings with CHE primary cells than HEp 2 cell line. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Chung Hua Chung Liu Tsa Chih 1985 Mar;7(2):103-5 <strong>[Comparison of the cytotoxic effect of fresh | |||
garlic, diallyl trisulfide, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), mitomycin C (MMC) and Cis-DDP on two lines of gastric | |||
cancer cells].</strong> | |||
[Article in Chinese] Pan XY Teratog Carcinog Mutagen 1998; 18(6):293-302 <strong> | |||
In vitro and in vivo study of the clastogenicity of the flavone cirsitakaoside extracted from Scoparia | |||
dulcis L. (Scrophulariaceae).</strong> Pereira-Martins SR, Takahashi CS, Tavares DC, Torres LM | |||
Department of Biology, Federal University of Maranhao, Sao Luis, MA. Brazil. <a | |||
href="mailto:smartins@rgm.fmrp.usp.br" | |||
target="_blank" | |||
>smartins@rgm.fmrp.usp.br</a> The mutagenic effect of the flavone cirsitakaoside extracted from the | |||
medicinal herb Scoparia dulcis was evaluated in vitro by using human peripheral blood cultures treated with | |||
doses of 5, 10, and 15 microg of the flavone/ml culture medium for 48 h. The compound proved to be mutagenic | |||
at the highest concentration tested (15 microg/ml). Furthermore, the proliferative index was significantly | |||
reduced in all cultures treated with the flavone, although the mitotic index was not reduced. However, the | |||
clastogenic activity of the flavone cirsitakaoside was not observed when Swiss mice were treated orally with | |||
doses of 10, 20, and 30 mg/animal for 24 h. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proc Nutr Soc 1977 Sep;36(2):51A.<strong>Attempts to overcome anti-nutritive factors in field beans (Vicia | |||
faba L) and field peas (Pisum sativum) fed in diets to laying hens. | |||
</strong> | |||
Davidson J | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Clin Nutr 1995 Sep;62(3):506-11. <strong>The influence of genetic taste markers on food | |||
acceptance.</strong> Drewnowski A, Rock CL Human Nutrition Program, School of Public Health, University | |||
of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-2029, USA. Genetically mediated sensitivity to the bitter taste of | |||
phenylthiocarbamide<strong> | |||
(PTC) and 6-n-propylthiouracil (Prop) has long been associated with enhanced sensitivity to other sweet | |||
and bitter compounds. New studies suggest that tasters and supertasters of Prop may also differ from | |||
notasters in their taste preferences and in their patterns of food rejection and food acceptance. One | |||
question is whether the acceptability of bitter-tasting vegetables is influenced by Prop taster status. | |||
Cruciferous vegetables are among the major dietary</strong> sources of potentially chemoprotective | |||
agents in cancer control, and their consumption is reported to alter cancer risk. Strategies aimed at | |||
dietary change in individuals or groups should consider the role of genetic taste markers and their | |||
potential influences on food preferences and dietary habits. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Environ Sci Health B 1999 Jul;34(4):681-708. <strong>Accumulation of potentially toxic elements in plants | |||
and their transfer to human food chain.</strong> | |||
Dudka S, Miller WP University of Georgia, Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Athens 30602-2727, USA. | |||
Contaminated soils can be a source for crop plants of such elements like As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, and Zn. The | |||
excessive transfer of As, Cu, Ni, and Zn to the food chain is controlled by a "soil-plant barrier"; <strong | |||
>however, for some elements, including Cd, the soil-plant barrier fails.</strong> The level of Cd ingested | |||
by average person in USA is about 12 micrograms/day, which is relatively low comparing to Risk Reference | |||
Dose (70 micrograms Cd/day) established by USEPA. <strong>Food of plant origin is a main source of Cd intake | |||
by modern society.</strong> Fish and shellfish may be a dominant dietary sources of Hg for some human | |||
populations. <strong>About half of human Pb intake is through food, of which more than half originates from | |||
plants.</strong> | |||
Dietary intake of Cd and Pb may be increased by application of sludges on cropland with already high levels | |||
of these metals. Soils amended with sludges in the USA <strong>will be permitted (by USEPA-503 regulations) | |||
to accumulate Cr, Cd, Cu, Pb, Hg, Ni, and Se, and Zn to levels from 10 to 100 times the present baseline | |||
concentrations.</strong> | |||
These levels are very permissive by international standards. Because of the limited supply of toxicity data | |||
obtained from metals applied in sewage sludge, predictions as to the new regulations will protect crop | |||
plants from metal toxicities, and food chain from contamination, are difficult to make. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
BJU Int 2000 Jan;85(1):107-13. <strong>A maternal vegetarian diet in pregnancy is associated with | |||
hypospadias. The ALSPAC Study Team. Avon Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood.</strong> | |||
North K, Golding J Unit of Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, Division of Child Health, University of | |||
Bristol, UK. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the possible role of the maternal diet, particularly vegetarianism | |||
and consumption of phytoestrogens, in the origin of hypospadias, which is reported to be increasing in | |||
prevalence. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Detailed information was obtained prospectively from mothers, including | |||
previous obstetric history, lifestyle and dietary practices, using structured self-completed questionnaires | |||
during pregnancy. Previously recognized associations with environmental and parental factors were examined, | |||
focusing particularly on the hypothesized hormonal link. Multivariate logistic regression was used to | |||
identify independent associations. RESULTS: Of 7928 boys born to mothers taking part in the Avon | |||
Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood, 51 hypospadias cases were identified. There were no | |||
significant differences in the proportion of hypospadias cases among mothers who smoked, consumed alcohol or | |||
for any aspect of their previous reproductive history (including the number of previous pregnancies, number | |||
of miscarriages, use of the contraceptive pill, time to conception and age at menarche). <strong>Significant | |||
differences were detected for some aspects of the maternal diet, i.e. vegetarianism and iron | |||
supplementation in the first half of pregnancy. Mothers who were vegetarian in pregnancy had an adjusted | |||
odds ratio (OR) of 4.99 (95% confidence interval, CI, 2.10-11.88) of giving birth to a boy with | |||
hypospadias, compared with omnivores who did not supplement their diet with iron. Omnivores who | |||
supplemented their diet with iron had an adjusted OR of 2.07 (</strong>95% CI, 1.00-4.32). The only | |||
other statistically significant association for hypospadias was with influenza in the first 3 months of | |||
pregnancy (adjusted OR 3.19, 95% CI 1.50-6.78). CONCLUSION: As vegetarians have a greater exposure to | |||
phytoestrogens than do omnivores, these results support the possibility that phytoestrogens have a | |||
deleterious effect on the developing male reproductive system. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<head><title>Vitamin E: Estrogen antagonist, energy promoter, and anti-inflammatory</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Vitamin E: Estrogen antagonist, energy promoter, and anti-inflammatory | |||
</h1> | |||
<em><p> | |||
Vitamin E, like progesterone and aspirin, acts within the cellular regulatory systems, to prevent | |||
inflammation and inappropriate excitation. Since uncontrolled excitation causes destructive oxidations, | |||
these substances prevent those forms of oxidation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Molecules that can easily be oxidized and reduced can function as antioxidants, and vitamin E does | |||
function as that kind of antioxidant in many chemical environments. But it is highly misleading to | |||
consider that as the explanation for its many beneficial biological effects. That kind of reasoning | |||
contributed to the use of the antioxidant carcinogens BHT and BHA as food additives and "antiaging" | |||
supplements, and many other chemicals are being promoted on the basis of their abstract antioxidant | |||
function. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Becoming aware of the real value of vitamin E will have far reaching implications in nutrition and | |||
medicine. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In determining criminal or civil legal responsibility, the concept "should have known" is recognized and | |||
used. In science, which is all about knowing, there is certainly a responsibility to be informed when | |||
the subject involves the life and health of millions of people. The science establishment of government | |||
and industry should be held responsible for the information it hides, destroys, or ignores for its own | |||
benefit. The US government has an agency for prosecuting research fraud, but the concept is applied so | |||
narrowly as to be meaningless, when deception has become the rule. And since it controls the court | |||
system, govenment agencies and their functionaries won't be prosecuted, even when their crimes become | |||
well known. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"Vitamin E was advocated as an effective treatment for heart disease by Dr. Ev<em>an Shute of London, | |||
Ontario more than 50 years ago.</em> | |||
<em> </em> | |||
<em>His pioneering claims, which were unacceptable to the medical community at large, have been | |||
confirmed by recent findings from epidemiologic studies and clinical trials.</em> | |||
<em>" </em> | |||
</p></em> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
Political scientists have recognized the process in which big corporations "capture" the governmental | |||
agencies that were created to regulate them. The editorial boards of professional journals can be captured | |||
even more cheaply than the agencies of government, and their influence can be even more valuable to | |||
industry. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If science impinges upon the plans of an industry, it can be managed into compliance, when the industry | |||
controls the journals and the agencies that fund research. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1940s, it had already become clear to the estrogen industry that vitamin E research was impinging on | |||
its vital interests. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The Manhattan Project, that created the atomic bomb, also created a generation of scientific and | |||
bureaucratic zealots who ignored public health and safety to advance their projects and their careers, and | |||
changed the way science was done. At exactly the same time, the pharmaceutical industry was using its | |||
financial and political power to change the way medicine was practiced and taught, and the consequences for | |||
world health rivalled those of the nuclear industry. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 1933 the physician R.J. Shute was aware of the problems associated with toxemia of pregnancy or | |||
preeclampsia. Especially among poorly nourished women, many pregnancies were complicated by circulatory | |||
problems, including cyclic bleeding, thrombosis, stroke, and hypertension, and these difficult pregnancies | |||
often ended in miscarriage or premature delivery, resulting in many serious health problems among the babies | |||
that survived. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
At that time, both estrogen and vitamin E were being widely studied, though the exact structure of the | |||
tocopherol molecule wasn't defined until 1936-37. Vitamin E had been found to improve fertility of both male | |||
and female animals, and to prevent intrauterine death of the embryo or fetus, so it was called the | |||
"antisterility vitamin." Using it to prevent women from having miscarriages must have occurred to many | |||
people. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Animal research in the 1930s was also showing that estrogen had many toxic effects, including causing | |||
infertility or intrauterine death, connective tissue abnormalities, and excessive blood clotting. Dr. Shute | |||
and his sons, Wilfred and Evan, were among those who considered vitamin E to be an antiestrogen. They found | |||
that it was very effective in preventing the clotting diseases of pregnancy. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Other researchers, who knew that progesterone protected against the toxic effects of estrogen, described | |||
vitamin E as the "progesterone-sparing agent," since so many of its antiestrogenic effects resembled those | |||
of progesterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The Shute brothers began using vitamin E to treat circulatory diseases in general, rather than just in | |||
pregnant women--blood clots, phlebitis, hypertension, heart disease, and diabetes all responded well to | |||
treatment with large doses. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vitamin E, as its name indicates, was the fifth type of "vitamin" factor to be identified, and it received | |||
its name in 1922, even though its chemical structure hadn't been identified. The public quickly understood | |||
and accepted that certain substances in food were essential for life and health, so by 1940 practically all | |||
physicians were recommending the use of nutritional supplements. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If vitamin E was essential for human health, and achieved at least some of its amazing effects by opposing | |||
estrogen, then the synthetic estrogen industry had a problem. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Edward L. Bernays had already been in business for decades, teaching corporations and governments how to | |||
"engineer consent." After his work for the government to engineer support for entering the first world war, | |||
Bernays' next big job was for the tobacco industry. To convince women to smoke cigarettes, to achieve | |||
equality with men, he organized an Easter parade, Torches of Freedom, in which thousands of women marched | |||
smoking their freedom torches. In association with the American Medical Association (the editor of JAMA | |||
actually helped the tobacco industry design its campaigns), Bernays ran a campaign to convince Americans | |||
that smoking was good for the health. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The drug industry began using his techniques in sometimes crude but always effective ways. Estrogen was | |||
named "the female hormone;" natural hormones, including estrogen and progesterone, were claimed, without any | |||
research, to be inactive when taken orally. Physician-shills were created to claim wonderful effects for | |||
estrogen. The vitamin status of the tocopherols was denied; as recently as the 1970s (and maybe later), | |||
university professors of dietetics were flatly saying "no one needs vitamin E." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Very little research showing the curative effects of vitamin E in human diseases was allowed to be | |||
published, so it was only occasionally necessary to openly denounce vitamin E as worthless or dangerous. In | |||
1981, the journal of the AMA published an article reviewing the "toxic" effects of vitamin E. Since I had | |||
read all of the articles cited, I realized that the author was claiming that whenever vitamin E changed | |||
something, the change was harmful, even though the original publication had described the effect as | |||
beneficial. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although JAMA was eventually forced to give up its revenue from cigarette advertising, it didn't suffer at | |||
all, because of the vast advertising campaigns of the estrogen industry. JAMA obviously wouldn't want to | |||
publish anything suggesting that vitamin E, or progesterone, or thyroid, might be beneficial because of its | |||
antagonism of the harmful effects of estrogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen causes changes in the uterus that prevent implantation of the embryo, and that impair support for | |||
its development if it has already implanted. It decreases the availability of oxygen to the embryo, while | |||
vitamin E increases it. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
My dissertation adviser, A.L. Soderwall, did a series of experiments in which he showed that providing | |||
hamsters with extra vitamin E postponed the onset of infertility in middle age. In my experiments, vitamin E | |||
increased the amount of oxygen in the uterus, correcting an oxygen deficiency produced either by | |||
supplemental estrogen or by old age. Progesterone has similar effects on the delivery of oxygen to the | |||
uterus. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 1940s, the official definition of vitamin E's activity was changed. Instead of its effectiveness in | |||
preventing the death and resorption of embryos, or the degeneration of the testicles or brain or muscles, it | |||
was redefined as an antioxidant, preventing the oxidation of unsaturated oils. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although some people continued to think of it as a protective factor against thrombosis, heart attacks, | |||
diabetes, and infertility, the medical establishment claimed that the prevention or cure of diseases in | |||
animals wasn't relevant to humans, and that a mere antioxidant couldn't prevent or cure any human disease. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The experiments that led to the identification of vitamin E involved feeding rats a diet containing rancid | |||
lard and, as a vitamin A supplement, cod liver oil. Both of these contained large amounts of polyunsaturated | |||
oils. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
From 1929 to the early 1930s, other researchers were claiming to have demonstrated that the polyunsaturated | |||
fatty acids were nutritionally essential. These experiments, like the vitamin E experiments, were done on | |||
rats, but the medical establishment was satisfied that rat experiments proved that humans need linoleic or | |||
linolenic acid, while they refused to accept that vitamin E was essential for humans. When, in the 1940s, a | |||
group of vitamin B6 researchers showed that the supposed "essential fatty acid deficiency" could be cured by | |||
a supplement of vitamin B6, it became apparent that the polyunsaturated fatty acids slowed metabolism, and | |||
reduced all nutritional needs. The thyroid hormone was powerfully suppressed by the "essential" fatty acids. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When we consider the two sets of experiments together, their outstanding feature is the toxicity of the | |||
polyunsaturated oils, which in one kind of experiment suppressed metabolism, and in the other kind of | |||
experiment created a variety of degenerative conditions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
By the late 1940s and early 1950s, estrogens of various sorts had been synthesized from hydrocarbons, and | |||
were being recommended to prevent miscarriages, because "estrogen is the female hormone." The meat industry | |||
had found that the polyunsaturated oils were valuable in animal feed, since they suppressed metabolism and | |||
made it cheaper to fatten the animals, and these antithyroid oils were next marketed as "heart protective" | |||
human foods, though by suppressing the thyroid and destroying vitamin E, they actually contributed to both | |||
heart disease and cancer. (Giving estrogen to livestock to improve their feed efficiency, and to people "to | |||
prevent heart attacks," was an interesting parallel to the oil promotional campaigns.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The influence of the food oil industry kept researchers away from the idea that these oils were not safe for | |||
food use, and instead tended to support the idea that vitamin E is just an antioxidant, and that the seed | |||
oils were the best way to get vitamin E in the diet. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The antifertility effects of the polyunsaturated oils, demonstrated in the vitamin E experiments, weren't at | |||
the time understood to have anything to do with estrogen's antifertility effects. But to understand vitamin | |||
E, I think we have to consider the close interactions between estrogen and the polyunsatured fatty acids | |||
(PUFA). Their actions are closely intertwined, and are antagonized by a variety of energizing and | |||
stabiliizing substances, including saturated fats, progesterone, thyroid, vitamin E, and aspirin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Generally, chemicals that inhibit enzymes are toxic, producing some sort of symptom or deterioration. But a | |||
group of enzymes related to estrogen and PUFA are inhibited by these protective substances. Although under | |||
our present diet, these enzymes metabolize the PUFA, in the fetus and newborn they act on our endogenous | |||
fats, the series related to the Mead acids. The Mead acid is antiinflammatory, and broadly protective. The | |||
dietary PUFA interfere with these natural protective substances, | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The enzymes that, if we didn"t eat PUFA, would be regulating the Mead series, being activated in response to | |||
stress, would be producing antistress substances, which would limit the stress reaction. But as we become | |||
increasingly saturated with the anti-vitamin E fats, these enzymes, instead of stopping inflammation, | |||
promote it and cause tissue injury. The remaining stress limiting factors, such as progesterone, by | |||
correcting the distortions caused by stress, tend to eliminate the conditions which activated the | |||
enzymes--in a very indirect form of inhibition. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many of the events involved in inflammation are increased by estrogen, and decreased by vitamin E. Estrogen | |||
causes capillaries to become leaky; vitamin E does the opposite. Estrogen increases platelet aggregation, | |||
and decreases a factor that inhibits platelet aggregation; vitamin E does the opposite. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Excess clotting is known to be caused by too much estrogen, and also by a vitamin E deficiency. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Clotting leads to fibrosis, and there is clear evidence that vitamin E prevents and cures fibrotic diseases, | |||
but this still isn't generally accepted by the powerful medical institutions. Estrogen and polyunsaturated | |||
fats increase fibrosis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen increases progstaglandin synthesis, vitamin E decreases their synthesis; estrogen increases the | |||
activity of the enzymes COX and LOX, vitamin E decreases their activitiy. (Jiang, et al., 2000; Ali, et al., | |||
1980; Parkhomets, et al., 2001.) Estrogen releases enzymes from lysosomes, vitamin E inhibits their release. | |||
Beta-glucuronidase, one of these enzymes, can release estrogen at the site of an inflammation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Estrogen often increases intracellular calcium and protein kinase C, vitamin E has generally opposite | |||
effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The polyunsaturated fatty acids and their derivatives, the prostaglandins, act as effectors, or amplifiers, | |||
of estrogen's actions. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If vitamin E is acting as a protectant against the polyunsaturated fatty acids, that in itself would account | |||
for at least some of its antiestrogenic effects. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides antagonizing some of the end effects of the toxic fatty acids, vitamin E inhibits lipolysis, | |||
lowering the concentration of free fatty acids (the opposite of estrogen"s effect), and it also binds to, | |||
and inactivates, free fatty acids. The long saturated carbon chain is very important for its full | |||
functioning, and this saturated chain might allow it to serve as a substitute for the omega -9 fats, from | |||
which the Mead acid is formed. The unsaturated tocotrienols have hardly been tested for the spectrum of true | |||
vitamin E activity, and animal studies have suggested that it may be toxic, since it caused liver | |||
enlargement. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One possibly crucial protective effect of vitamin E against the polyunsaturated fatty acids that hasn't been | |||
explored is the direct destruction of linolenic and linoleic acid. It is known that <strong>bacterial | |||
vitamin E is involved in the saturation of unsaturated fatty acids, and it is also known that intestinal | |||
bacteria turn linoleic and linolenic acids into the fully saturated stearic acid.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"No metabolic function is known for alpha-tocopherolquinol or its quinone other than as a cofactor | |||
in the biohydrogenation of unsaturated fatty acids that can be carried out by only a few | |||
organisms."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong> | |||
<em>P.E. Hughes and S.B. Tove, 1982.</em></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong><em>"Linoleic acid was significantly decreased (P < 0.001) and there was a significant rise (P | |||
< 0.05) in its hydrogenation product, stearic acid. Linolenic acid was also significantly | |||
decreased. . . ." "The study provides evidence that bacteria from the human colon can hydrogenate | |||
C18 essential polyunsaturated fatty acids."</em></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<em> | |||
F.A. Howard & C. | |||
</em> | |||
<em>Henderson, 1999</em> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Because of the way in which the decision to call vitamin E a simple antioxidant was conditioned by the | |||
historical setting, there has been a reluctance, until recently, to give much weight to the pathogenicity of | |||
lipid peroxidation and free radicals, partly because lipid peroxidation is only a minor part of the toxicity | |||
of the polyunsaturated oils, and there was little support for the investigation of the real nature of their | |||
toxicity. This environment has even distorted the actual antioxidant value of the various forms of vitamin | |||
E. (For example, see Chen, et al., 2002.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The people who say that vitamin E is nothing but an antioxidant sometimes take other antioxidants, with, or | |||
instead of, vitamin E. BHT, BHA, and many natural compounds (derived from industrial and agricultural | |||
wastes) are often said to be "better than vitamin E" as antioxidants. Anything that can be oxidized and | |||
reduced (melatonin, estrogen, tryptophan, carotene, etc.) will function as an antioxidant in some system, | |||
but in other circumstances, it can be a pro-oxidant. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The people who think there is benefit in the abstract "antioxidant" function seem to be thinking in terms of | |||
something that will, like a ubiquitous fire department, put out every little fire as soon as it starts. I | |||
think it's more appropriate to think of the biological antioxidant systems as programs for controlling the | |||
arsonists before they can set the fires. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since the requirement for vitamin E decreases as the consumption of unsaturated fats decreases, the | |||
requirement, if any, would be very small if we didn't eat significant quantities of those fats. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the years since the tocopherols were identified as vitamin E, the material sold for research and for use | |||
as a nutritional supplement has changed drastically several times, even when it has been given a specific | |||
chemical identity, such as mixed tocopherols or d-alpha tocopherol. Variations in viscosity and color, | |||
caused by changes in the impurities, have undoubtedly influenced its biological effects, but the ideology | |||
about its antioxidant value has kept researchers from finding out what a particular batch of it really is | |||
and what it really does. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"We compared the effect of a mixed tocopherol preparation with that of alpha-tocopherol alone on | |||
superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and iNOS expression in cultured myocytes exposed to | |||
</strong> | |||
<strong>H-R." "Both tocopherol preparations attenuated cell injury. . . ." "However, mixed-tocopherol | |||
preparation was much superior to alpha-tocopherol in terms of myocyte protection. . . ." "Lack of | |||
efficacy of commercial tocopherol preparations in clinical trials may reflect absence of gamma- and | |||
delta-tocopherols."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>Chen<em> | |||
H, Li D, Saldeen T, Romeo F, Mehta JL,Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2002 "Mixed tocopherol preparation | |||
is superior to alpha-tocopherol alone against hypoxia-reoxygenation injury."</em></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Keeping our diet as free as possible of the polyunsaturated fats, to create something like the "deficiency" | |||
state that is so protective (against cancer, trauma, poison, shock, inflammation, infection, etc.) in the | |||
animal experiments, seems preferable to trying to saturate ourselves with antioxidants, considering the | |||
imperfectly defined nature of the vitamin E products, and the known toxicity of many of the other | |||
antioxidants on the market. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The carcinogenic properties of the polyunsaturated fats have been known for more than 50 years, as has the | |||
principle of extending the life span by restricted feeding. More recently several studies have demonstrated | |||
that the long lived species contain fewer highly unsaturated fats than the short lived species. <strong | |||
>Restriction of calories prevents the lipids in the brain, heart, and liver from becoming more unsaturated | |||
with aging.</strong> | |||
(Lee, et al., 1999; Laganiere, et al., 1993; Tacconi, et al., 1991; R. Patzelt-Wenczler, 1981.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When cells are grown in tissue culture without the "essential fatty acids," they become "deficient," and in | |||
that state are very resistant to chemical injury, and can be grown indefinitely. Besides being a simple | |||
demonstration of the way in which the polyunsaturated fats sensitize cells to injury (Wey, et al., 1993), | |||
these experiments must be an embarrassment to the people who base their argument for the oils" essentiality | |||
on a supposed requirement for "making cell membranes." Since the cells can multiply nicely in their | |||
deficient state, we have to conclude that the oils aren"t needed for "membranes," or maybe that cells resist | |||
injury better "without membranes." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the opposite direction, an excess of insulin or prolactin, or a deficiency of vitamin E, increases the | |||
activity of the enzymes that convert linoleic acid into the more highly unsaturated fatty acids. Excess | |||
insulin and prolactin are crucially involved in many degenerative diseases. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The highly unsaturated fats suppress respiration in many ways, and these trends toward increased | |||
unsaturation with aging, endocrine stress, and vitamin E deficiency parallel the life-long trend toward | |||
lower energy production from respiration. Many studies show that vitamin E can protect and improve | |||
mitochondrial energy production. (Kikuchi, et al., 1991; Donchenko, et al., 1990, 1983; Guarnieri, et al., | |||
1981, 1982.) But the state of so-called essential fatty acid deficiency not only makes mitochondria very | |||
resistant to injury, it greatly intensifies their energy production. Vitamin E supplementation is seldom as | |||
effective as the absence of the toxic oils. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Many nutrition charts no longer list liver as a good source of vitamin E, but a large portion of an animal"s | |||
vitamin E is in its liver. This bias in the dietetic literature can be traced to various sources, but a | |||
major influence was the campaign in the 1970s by the drug companies that had patented new forms of synthetic | |||
"vitamin A." They had physicians and professors fabricate stories about the great toxicity of natural | |||
vitamin A, and placed the stories in national magazines, to clear the field for their supposedly non-toxic | |||
products, which have turned out to be disastrously toxic. The result is that many people have fearfully | |||
stopped eating liver, because of its vitamin A. The other vitamins in liver, including vitamin K, function | |||
very closely with vitamin E, and the stably stored forms of vitamin E are likely to be a good approximation | |||
for our needs. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There is still a strong division between what people can say in their professional publications, and what | |||
they believe. A man who was influential in designating vitamin E as an antioxidant, M.K. Horwitt, complained | |||
when the government raised its recommended vitamin E intake by 50%, because it wasn"t supported by new data, | |||
and because millions of people get only ten milligrams per day and "are healthy." But he has been taking 200 | |||
mg daily (plus aspirin) for many years. He apparently doesn't have very much confidence in the ideas he | |||
advocates publicly. | |||
</p> | |||
<p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p> | |||
<p> | |||
Prostaglandins Med 1980 Feb;4(2):79-85. <strong>Inhibition of human platelet cyclooxygenase by | |||
alpha-tocopherol.</strong> Ali M, Gudbranson CG, McDonald JW. Alpha-tocopherol, an inhibitor of platelet | |||
aggregation, was evaluated for its<strong> | |||
effects on the synthesis of thromboxane and prostaglandins. A dose-dependent reduction in thromboxane B2 | |||
and prostaglandin D2 synthesis was observed with</strong> | |||
approximately 60% inhibition at 5.0 IU or alpha-tocopherol. Alpha-tocopherol produced a time-dependent, | |||
irreversible inhibition. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Vitam Nutr Res 2001 Jan;71(1):18-24. <strong>Vitamin E and the prevention of atherosclerosis.</strong> | |||
Bron D, Asmis R. "Recent new findings have shed new light<strong> | |||
on the physiological role of vitamin E and suggest that it has a much broader array of biological | |||
activities than originally expected. In addition to its well described role as an antioxidant, it is | |||
becoming evident that vitamin E also can modulate the immune system, suppress local and chronic | |||
inflammation, reduce blood coagulation and thrombus formation, and enhance cell function and | |||
survival."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Plast Reconstr Surg 1981 Nov;68(5):696-9. <strong>The effectiveness of alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) in | |||
reducing the incidence of spherical contracture around breast implants.</strong> Baker JL Jr. Vitamin E | |||
appears to be a safe, simple, and inexpensive means of reducing the number of postoperative capsular | |||
contractures following breast augmentation. The synthetic form of vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) is | |||
recommended to avoid nausea or skin eruptions in patients with oily skin, which are frequently encountered | |||
when the natural form is taken. No harmful side effects have been noted in any of the patients to date. | |||
Vitamin E has no effect on coagulation systems and does not cause excessive bleeding either during or after | |||
surgery. The recommended dosage of synthetic vitamin E is 1000 IU, b.i.d., for 2 years beginning 1 week | |||
before surgery. If no contracture exists at that time, the dosage may be reduced to 1000 IU daily | |||
thereafter. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Carcinogenesis 1999 Jun;20(6):1019-24. <strong>Decrease in linoleic acid metabolites as a potential | |||
mechanism in cancer risk reduction by conjugated linoleic acid.</strong> Banni S, Angioni E, Casu V, | |||
Melis MP, Carta G, Corongiu FP, Thompson H, Ip C. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mech Ageing Dev 1978 Nov;8(5):311-28. <strong>Anomalous vitamin E effects in mitochondrial oxidative | |||
metabolism.</strong> Baumgartner WA, Hill VA, Wright ET. Three different vitamin E effects, suggestive | |||
of specific antioxidant effects, were discovered in the protective action of vitamin E against respiratory | |||
decline (a decrease in mitochondrial respiration attributed to a "leakage" of electron transport radicals). | |||
<strong> | |||
No correlation was found between respiraotry decline and random lipid peroxidation.</strong> The | |||
mechanisms behind two of the three atypical vitamin E effects were defined. Both involve an artifact in the | |||
TBA assay for lipid peroxidation. This artifact occurs when TBA assays are carried<strong> | |||
out in the presence of sucrose and acetaldehyde; the latter is produced from ethanol, the solvent used | |||
to add vitamin E to preparations. The artifact in the TBA assay for peroxidations appears also to be | |||
responsible for differing interpretations of the hepatotoxic effect of ethanol.</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Eur J Biochem 1990 Mar 10;188(2):327-32. <strong>Polychlorinated biphenyls increase fatty acid desaturation | |||
in the proliferating endoplasmic reticulum of pigeon and rat livers.</strong> Borlakoglu JT, | |||
Edwards-Webb JD, Dils RR. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Nutr Cancer 2000;38(1):87-97. <strong>Effects of topical and oral vitamin E on pigmentation and skin cancer | |||
induced by ultraviolet irradiation in Skh:2 hairless mice.</strong> Burke KE, Clive J, Combs GF Jr, | |||
Commisso J, Keen CL, Nakamura RM. <strong>"Results showed that the skin concentrations of Eol, as well as | |||
levels in the adipose tissue, were increased after topical application. Mice treated with each form of | |||
vitamin E showed no signs of toxicity and had significantly less acute and chronic skin damage induced | |||
by UV irradiation, as indicated by reduced inflammation and pigmentation and by later onset and lesser | |||
incidence of skin cancer."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Am J Physiol 1991 Jun;260(6 Pt 2):R1235-40. <strong>Acute phase response in exercise. II. Associations | |||
between vitamin E, cytokines, and muscle proteolysis.</strong> Cannon JG, Meydani SN, Fielding RA, | |||
Fiatarone MA, Meydani M, Farhangmehr M, Orencole SF, Blumberg JB, Evans WJ. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Vrach Delo 1990 Dec;(12):6-8. <strong>[The effect of tocopherol and nicotinic acid on the microcirculation | |||
and blood coagulability in patients with ischemic heart disease]</strong> Chernomorets NN, Kotlubei GV, | |||
Vatutin NT, Zhivotovskaia IA, Gnilitskaia VB, Alifanova RE, Lobach EIa, Mal'tseva NV, Mitrofanov AN. | |||
"Complex treatment using tocopherol acetate produced a positive effect on the coagulation properties of the | |||
blood and did essentially influence the fibrinolytic activity and microcirculation. Tocopherol plus | |||
nicotinic acid resulted in normalization of the blood coagulation process,<strong> | |||
favoured activation of fibrinolysis and improvement of the microcirculatory bed."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Free Radic Biol Med 1991;10(5):325-38. <strong>Oxidative status and oral contraceptive. Its relevance to | |||
platelet abnormalities and cardiovascular risk.</strong> Ciavatti M, Renaud S. INSERM Unit 63, Bron, | |||
France. <strong>"Oral contraceptive (OC) use is a risk for thrombogenic events."</strong> "From these data | |||
we conclude that: <strong> | |||
1. OC use modifies slightly but significantly the oxidative status in women and in animals by decreasing | |||
in plasma and blood cells the antioxidant defenses</strong> (vitamins and enzymes). 2. The changes in | |||
the oxidative status are related to an increase in plasma lipid peroxides apparently responsible for the | |||
hyperaggregability and possibly the imbalance in clotting factors associated with the OC-induced | |||
prethrombotic state. <strong> | |||
3. These effects of OC appear to be increased by a high intake of polyunsaturated fat and counteracted | |||
by supplements of vitamin E.</strong> 4. The risk factors acting synergistically with OC, have all been | |||
shown to increase platelet reactivity." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bol Med Hosp Infant Mex 1980 May-Jun;37(3):457-67. <strong>[Jaundice caused by microangiopathic hemolysis | |||
associated to septicemia in the newborn]</strong> | |||
Covarrubias Espinoza G, Lepe Zuniga JL. "These infants with over 3% fragmented cells<strong> | |||
were found to have a significant association with: sepsis, jaundice, crenated RBC's, low levels of | |||
hemoglobin, increased reticulocyte count, and low vitamin E levels."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Endocrinology 1992 Nov;131(5):2482-4. <strong>Vitamin E protects hypothalamic beta-endorphin neurons from | |||
estradiol neurotoxicity.</strong> Desjardins GC, Beaudet A, Schipper HM, Brawer JR.<strong> | |||
"Estradiol valerate (EV) treatment has been shown to result in the destruction of 60% of beta-endorphin | |||
neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. Evidence suggests that the mechanism of EV-induced | |||
neurotoxicity involves the conversion of estradiol to catechol estrogen and subsequent oxidation to free | |||
radicals in local peroxidase-positive astrocytes.</strong> In this study, we examined whether treatment | |||
with the antioxidant, vitamin E, protects beta-endorphin neurons from the neurotoxic action of estradiol. | |||
<strong>Our results demonstrate that chronic vitamin E treatment prevents the decrement in hypothalamic | |||
beta-endorphin concentrations resulting from arcuate beta-endorphin cell loss, suggesting that the | |||
latter is mediated by free radicals.</strong> | |||
<strong>Vitamin E treatment also prevented the onset of persistent vaginal cornification and polycystic | |||
ovarian condition which have been shown to result from the EV-induced hypothalamic pathology."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Free Radic Biol Med 2000 Dec 15;29(12):1302-6. <strong>Hyperinsulinemia: the missing link among oxidative | |||
stress and age-related diseases?</strong> | |||
Facchini FS, Hua NW, Reaven GM, Stoohs RA. <strong>"Other proaging effects of insulin involve the inhibition | |||
of proteasome and the stimulation of polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) synthesis and of nitric oxide | |||
(NO). The hypothesis that hyperinsulinemia accelerates aging also offers a</strong> | |||
<strong>metabolic explanation for the life-prolonging effect of calorie restriction</strong> and of | |||
mutations decreasing the overall activity of insulin-like receptors in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Bacteriol 1982 Sep;151(3):1397-402. <strong>Occurrence of alpha-tocopherolquinone and | |||
alpha-tocopherolquinol in microorganisms.</strong> | |||
Hughes PE, Tove SB. "Both alpha-tocopherolquinol and alpha-tocopherolquinone were found in 56 of 93 strains | |||
of microorganisms examined." "Those microorganisms that did not contain alpha-tocopherolquinol or | |||
alpha-tocopherolquinone tended to fall into two groups. One group consisted of gram-positive, anaerobic or | |||
facultative bacteria with a low content of guanine and cytosine, and the second group encompassed all of the | |||
filamentous microorganisms studied<strong>." "No metabolic function is known for alpha-tocopherolquinol or | |||
its quinone other than as a cofactor in the biohydrogenation of unsaturated fatty acids that can be | |||
carried out by only a few organisms."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem 1980 Dec 25;255(24):11802-6. <strong>Identification of deoxy-alpha-tocopherolquinol as another | |||
endogenous electron donor for biohydrogenation.</strong> Hughes PE, Tove SB. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
J Biol Chem 1980 May 25;255(10):4447-52. <strong>Identification of an endogenous electron donor for | |||
biohydrogenation as alpha-tocopherolquinol.</strong> Hughes PE, Tove SB. "The ratio of | |||
alpha-tocopherolquinone produced to fatty acid reduced was 2:1 when the tocopherol derivatives were | |||
extracted aerobically. When the extraction was carried out anaerobically, the ratio was 1. It is suggested | |||
that the oxidation of 2 molecules of alpha-tocopherolquinol, each to the semiquinone, provides the electrons | |||
required for the reduction of the cis-bond of the conjugated dienoic fatty acid." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lett Appl Microbiol 1999 Sep;29(3):193-6. <strong>Hydrogenation of polyunsaturated fatty acids by human | |||
colonic bacteria.</strong> Howard FA, Henderson C. Emulsions of the fatty acids linoleic (C18:2 n-6), | |||
alpha-linolenic (C18:3 n-3) and arachidonic acid (C20:4 n-6) were incubated for 4 h under anaerobic | |||
conditions with human faecal suspensions. <strong>Linoleic acid was significantly decreased (P < 0.001) | |||
and there was a significant rise (P < 0.05) in its hydrogenation product, stearic acid. Linolenic | |||
acid was also significantly decreased (P < 0.01), and significant increases in C18:3 cis-trans | |||
isomers (P < 0.01) and linoleic acid (P < 0.05) were seen. With each acid, there were | |||
non-significant increases in acids considered to be intermediates in biohydrogenation. The study | |||
provides evidence that bacteria from the human colon can hydrogenate C18 essential polyunsaturated fatty | |||
acids.</strong> | |||
However, with arachidonic acid there was no evidence of hydrogenation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids 1998 Dec;59(6):395-400. <strong>Modulation of rat liver lipid | |||
metabolism by prolactin.</strong> Igal RA, de Gomez Dumm IN, Goya RG. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Clin Chim Acta 1994 Mar;225(2):97-103. <strong>Vitamin E and the hypercoagulability of neonatal | |||
blood.</strong> Jain SK, McCoy B, Wise R. <strong><hr /></strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2000 Oct 10;97(21):11494-9. <strong>gamma-tocopherol and its major metabolite, in | |||
contrast to alpha-tocopherol, inhibit cyclooxygenase activity in macrophages and epithelial | |||
cells.</strong> Jiang Q, Elson-Schwab I, Courtemanche C, Ames BN<strong>. "Cyclooxygenase-2 | |||
(COX-2)-catalyzed synthesis of prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) plays a key role in inflammation and its | |||
associated diseases, such as cancer and vascular heart disease. Here we report that gamma-tocopherol | |||
(gammaT) reduced PGE(2) synthesis in both lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated RAW264.7 macrophages and | |||
IL-1beta-treated A549 human epithelial cells with an apparent IC(50) of 7.5 and 4 microM, respectively." | |||
"The inhibitory effects of gammaT and gamma-CEHC stemmed from their inhibition of COX-2 activity, rather | |||
than affecting protein expression or substrate availability, and appeared to be independent of | |||
antioxidant activity."</strong> | |||
"The inhibitory potency of gammaT and gamma-CEHC was diminished by an increase in AA concentration, | |||
suggesting that they might compete with AA at the active site of COX-2. We also observed a moderate | |||
reduction of nitrite accumulation and suppression of inducible nitric oxide synthase expression by gammaT in | |||
lipopolysaccharide-treated macrophages. These findings indicate that gammaT and its major metabolite possess | |||
anti-inflammatory activity and that gammaT at physiological concentrations may be important in human disease | |||
prevention." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 1992 Sep;56(9):1420-3.<strong> | |||
Effects of alpha-tocopherol and tocotrienols on blood pressure and linoleic acid metabolism in the | |||
spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR).</strong> Koba K, Abe K, Ikeda I, Sugano M. Both alpha-tocopherol | |||
and a 1:1.7 mixture of alpha-tocopherol and tocotrienols at a 0.2% dietary level significantly depressed the | |||
age-related increase in the systolic blood pressure of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) after 3 weeks | |||
of feeding. <strong>The aortic production of prostacyclin was increased 1.5 times both by alpha-tocopherol | |||
and a tocotrienol mixture, suggesting a possible relevance to their hypotensive</strong> effect. These | |||
vitamins did not influence the delta 6- and delta 5-desaturase activities of liver microsomes, <strong>but | |||
fatty acid profiles of the liver phospholipids predicted a reduction of linoleic acid | |||
desaturation.</strong> These effects were in general more clear with tocotrienols than with | |||
alpha-tocopherol. Platelet aggregation by 5 microM ADP remained uninfluenced. Thus, tocotrienols may have | |||
effects on various lipid parameters somewhat different from those of alpha-tocopherol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Gerontology 1993;39(1):7-18. <strong>Modulation of membrane phospholipid fatty acid composition by age and | |||
food restriction.</strong> | |||
Laganiere S, Yu BP. H.M. "Phospholipids from liver mitochondrial and microsomal membrane preparations were | |||
analyzed to further assess the effects of age and lifelong calorie restriction on membrane lipid | |||
composition." <strong>"The data revealed characteristic patterns of age-related changes in ad libitum (AL) | |||
fed rats:</strong> | |||
<strong>membrane levels of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, 22:4 and 22:5, increased progressively, | |||
while membrane linoleic acid (18:2) decreased steadily with age. Levels of 18:2 fell by approximately | |||
40%, and 22:5 content almost doubled making the peroxidizability index increase with age.</strong>" | |||
"<strong>We concluded that the membrane-stabilizing action of long-term calorie restriction relates to the | |||
selective modification of membrane long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids during aging.</strong>" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Free Radic Biol Med 1999 Feb;26(3-4):260-5. <strong>Modulation of cardiac mitochondrial membrane fluidity by | |||
age and calorie intake.</strong> Lee J, Yu BP, Herlihy JT. <strong>"The fatty acid composition of the | |||
mitochondrial membranes of the two ad lib fed groups differed: the long-chain polyunsaturated 22:4 fatty | |||
acid was higher in the older group, although linoleic acid (18:2) was lower. DR eliminated the | |||
differences."</strong> | |||
"Considered together, these results suggest that DR <strong>maintains the integrity of the cardiac | |||
mitochondrial membrane fluidity by minimizing membrane damage through modulation of membrane fatty acid | |||
profile."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lipids 2001 Jun;36(6):589-93. <strong>Effect of dietary restriction on age-related increase of liver | |||
susceptibility to peroxidation in rats.</strong> Leon TI, Lim BO, Yu BP, Lim Y, Jeon EJ, Park DK. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Jpn J Pharmacol 1979 Apr;29(2):179-86. <strong> | |||
Effect of linoleic acid hydroperoxide on liver microsomal enzymes in vitro.</strong> Masuda Y, Murano T. | |||
"Rat liver microsomes incubated with linoleic acid hydroperoxide (LAHPO) lost cytochrome P-450 specifically | |||
among the enzymes of microsomal electron transport systems. The loss of cytochrome P-450 content and | |||
glucose-6-phosphatase activity by LAHPO was accompanied by an increase in malondialdehyde (MDA) production." | |||
"These results suggest the possibility that the loss of microsomal enzyme activities during lipid | |||
peroxidation may be attributed<strong> | |||
largely to a direct attack on enzyme proteins by lipid peroxides rather than</strong> | |||
indirectly to a structural damage of microsomal membranes resulting from peroxidative breakdown of membrane | |||
lipids." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Ukr Biokhim Zh 2001 Jan-Feb;73(1):43-7. <strong>[Effect of alpha-tocopherol, tocopheryl quinone and other | |||
complexes with tocopherol-binding proteins on the activity of enzymes metabolizing arachidonic | |||
acid]</strong> Parkhomets' VP, Silonov SB, Donchenko HV. Palladin Institute of Biochemistry, National | |||
Academy of Science of Ukraine, Kyiv. alpha-Tocopherol, tocopherylquinon jointly with the proteins tocopherol | |||
acceptors from cytosole <strong>were identified to inhibit the activity of 5-lipoxigenase and so the | |||
synthesis of leukotriene A4 at the early stages providing for A4 hydrolase activation and C4 | |||
synthesase,</strong> as well as accelerate leukotrienes B4 and C4 synthesis at the further stages | |||
respectively changing the final spectrum of leukotriens in the organism tissues. Firstly, the leading role | |||
of proteins complexes capable to strengthen the effect of alpha-tocopherol and tocopherylquinon on | |||
arachidonic acid oxidative metabolism was determined. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Vitam Nutr Res 1981;51(1):26-33. <strong>[Effect of vitamin E on the synthesis of polyunsaturated | |||
fatty acids]</strong> Patzelt-Wenczler R. The formation of polyunsaturated fatty acids is influenced by | |||
vitamin E. The enzyme of the endoplasmic reticulum isolated from rat liver responsible for chain elongation | |||
and desaturation showed higher activity under vitamin E-deficiency. The activity was raised both per mg | |||
protein and per mg DNA. The application of alpha-Tocopherol to the vitamin E-deficient animals caused the | |||
normalization of the enzyme activity within 48 hours. This indicates a regulatory function of | |||
alpha-Tocopherol in the process of oxidation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Lipids 2001 May;36(5):491-8. <strong>Correlation of fatty acid unsaturation of the major liver mitochondrial | |||
phospholipid classes in mammals to their maximum life span potential.</strong> | |||
Portero-Otin M, Bellmunt MJ, Ruiz MC, Barja G, Pamplona R. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Free Radic Biol Med 1999 Oct;27(7-8):729-37. <strong>Age-dependent increase of collagenase expression can be | |||
reduced by alpha-tocopherol via protein kinase C inhibition.</strong> Ricciarelli R, Maroni P, Ozer N, | |||
Zingg JM, Azzi A. "Our in vitro experiments with skin fibroblasts suggest that alpha-tocopherol may protect | |||
against skin aging by decreasing the level of collagenase expression, which is induced by environmental | |||
insults and by aging." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids 1991 Oct;44(2):89-92. <strong>Inhibition of PGE2 production in | |||
macrophages from vitamin E-treated rats.</strong> Sakamoto W, Fujie K, Nishihira J, Mino M, Morita I, | |||
Murota S. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Int J Vitam Nutr Res 1990;60(1):26-34. <strong>The influence of vitamin E on rheological parameters in high | |||
altitude mountaineers.</strong> Simon-Schnass I, Korniszewski L. <strong>"The erythrocyte filterability | |||
was unaltered in the vitamin E group in comparison with baseline but was significantly impaired in the | |||
control group."</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Neurobiol Aging 1991 Jan-Feb;12(1):55-9. <strong>Aging and food restriction: effect on lipids of cerebral | |||
cortex.</strong> Tacconi MT, Lligona L, Salmona M, Pitsikas N, Algeri S. In experimental animals dietary | |||
restriction reduces the body weight increase due to aging, increases longevity and delays the onset of | |||
age-related physiological deterioration, including age-related changes in serum lipids. Little is known | |||
about the influence of food restriction on brain lipids, whose concentration and composition have been shown | |||
to change with age. We studied whether some biochemical and biophysical parameters of rat brain membranes, | |||
known to be modified with age, were affected by a diet low in calories, in which 50% of lipids and 35% of | |||
carbohydrates have been replaced by fibers. The diet was started at weaning and maintained throughout the | |||
animal's entire life span. Animals fed the low calorie diet survived longer and gained less body weight than | |||
standard diet fed rats. Age-related increases in microviscosity, cholesterol/phospholipid and | |||
sphingomyelin/phosphatidylcholine ratios were <strong>reduced or restored to the levels of young animals in | |||
cortex membranes of 32 old rats fed the low calorie diet, while the age-related increase in mono- to | |||
polyunsaturated fatty acid ratios in phospholipids was further raised.</strong> In conclusion we have | |||
shown that a diet low in calories and high in fibers affects lipid composition in the rat brain, <strong>in | |||
a direction opposite to that normally believed to reduce age-related deterioration of brain | |||
functions</strong>. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 1993 May;120(1):72-9. <strong>Essential fatty acid deficiency in cultured human | |||
keratinocytes attenuates toxicity due to lipid peroxidation.</strong> Wey HE, Pyron L,<strong> | |||
Human keratinocytes are commonly grown in culture with a serum-free medium. Under these conditions, | |||
keratinocytes become essential fatty acid deficient (EFAD), as determined by gas chromatographic | |||
analysis of cell phospholipid fatty acid composition. Exposure of EFAD keratinocytes for 2 hr to | |||
concentrations of t-butyl hydroperoxide (tBHP) up to 2 mM did not result in toxicity assessed by lactate | |||
dehydrogenase (LDH) release and only a small indication of lipid peroxidation assessed by the release of | |||
thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances</strong> (TBARS). Addition of 10 microM linoleic acid (LA) to | |||
serum-free medium alleviated the EFAD condition by increasing the phospholipid content of LA and its | |||
elongation and desaturation products, arachidonic acid and docosatetraenoic acid. Exposure of | |||
LA-supplemented keratinocytes to tBHP resulted in significant LDH (at 1 and 2 mM tBHP) and TBARS (tBHP | |||
concentration dependent) release. TBARS release was also significantly elevated in unexposed LA-supplemented | |||
keratinocytes (basal release). Co-supplementation with the antioxidant,<strong> | |||
alpha-tocopherol succinate (TS) prevented tBHP (1 mM)-induced LDH release in LA-supplemented cultures. | |||
TS supplementation also attenuated the effect of tBHP on TBARS release, but when compared to | |||
TS-supplemented EFAD cultures, LA</strong> supplementation still led to increased tBHP-induced TBARS | |||
release. Keratinocyte cultures are potentially useful as an alternative to animals in toxicology research | |||
and testing. It is important, however, that the cell model provide a response to toxic insult similar to | |||
that experienced in vivo. Our results suggest that fatty acid and antioxidant nutrition of cultured | |||
keratinocytes are important parameters in mediating the toxic effects of lipid peroxidation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cancer Lett 1997 Jan 1;111(1-2):179-85. <strong>Subcutaneous, omentum and tumor fatty acid composition, and | |||
serum insulin status in patients with benign or cancerous ovarian or endometrial tumors. Do tumors | |||
preferentially utilize polyunsaturated fatty acids?</strong> Yam D, Ben-Hur H, Dgani R, Fink A, Shani A, | |||
Berry EM. | |||
</p> | |||
<em> | |||
AC Chan, J. of Nutrition, 1998</em> | |||
"The response-to-injury hypothesis explains atherosclerosis as a chronic inflammatory response to injury of the | |||
endothelium, which leads to complex cellular and molecular interactions among cells derived from the | |||
endothelium, smooth muscle and several blood cell components. Inflammatory and other stimuli trigger an | |||
overproduction of free radicals, which promote peroxidation of lipids in LDL trapped in the subendothelial | |||
space. Products of LDL oxidation are bioactive, and they induce endothelial expression and secretion of | |||
cytokines, growth factors and several cell surface adhesion molecules. The last-mentioned are capable of | |||
recruiting circulating monocytes and T lymphocytes into the intima where monocytes are differentiated into | |||
macrophages, the precursor of foam cells. In response to the growth factors and cytokines, smooth muscle cells | |||
proliferate in the intima, resulting in the narrowing of the lumen. Oxidized LDL can also inhibit endothelial | |||
production of prostacyclin and nitric oxide, two potent autacoids that are vasodilators and inhibitors of | |||
platelet aggregation. Evidence is presented that vitamin E is protective against the development of | |||
atherosclerosis. Vitamin E enrichment has been shown to retard LDL oxidation, inhibit the proliferation of | |||
smooth muscle cells, inhibit platelet adhesion and aggregation, inhibit the expression and function of adhesion | |||
molecules, attenuate the synthesis of leukotrienes and potentiate the release of prostacyclin through | |||
up-regulating the expression of cytosolic phospholipase A2 and cyclooxygenase. Collectively, these biological | |||
functions of vitamin E may account for its protection against the development of atherosclerosis." | |||
<p> | |||
6: Early Hum Dev 1994 Nov 18;39(3):177-88 Vitamin A and related essential nutrients in cord blood: | |||
relationships with anthropometric measurements at birth. Ghebremeskel K, Burns L, Burden TJ, Harbige L, | |||
Costeloe K, Powell JJ, Crawford M. Institute of Brain Chemistry and Human Nutrition, Queen Elizabeth | |||
Hospital for Children, London, UK. Following the advice given by the Department of Health to women who are, | |||
or may become pregnant, not to eat liver and liver products because of the risk of vitamin A toxicity, the | |||
concentrations of vitamins A and E, and copper, magnesium and zinc in cord blood were investigated. The | |||
study was conducted in Hackney, an inner city area of London. Esters of vitamin A were not detected in any | |||
of the samples, indicating that there was no biochemical evidence of a risk of toxicity. Indeed, vitamin A | |||
correlated significantly with birthweight, head circumference, length, and gestation period. There was also | |||
a significant positive relationship between zinc and birthweight. In contrast, copper showed a negative | |||
correlation with birthweight and head circumference. Vitamin E and magnesium were not associated with any of | |||
the anthropometric measurements, although magnesium showed an increasing trend with birthweight. The data | |||
suggest that most of the mothers of the subjects studied may have been marginal with respect to vitamins A | |||
and E and zinc. In those with low birthweight babies. a higher intake would have improved their nutritional | |||
status and possibly the outcome of their pregnancy. For these low-income mothers, liver and liver products | |||
are the cheapest and the best source of vitamins A and E, haem iron, B vitamins and several other essential | |||
nutrients; hence the advice of the Department of Health may have been misplaced. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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<html> | |||
<head><title>Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
I have spoken to many people who believe they should drink "8 glasses of water every day," in addition to | |||
their normal foods, even if they don't feel thirsty. Many doctors still recite this dangerous slogan, but | |||
the addition of the qualifying phrase, "or other liquids," has become common. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The amount of water a person needs is extremely variable, depending on things such as metabolic rate, | |||
activity, and the temperature and humidity of the air. Working hard in hot, dry weather, it's possible to | |||
drink more than two quarts per hour for more than eight hours, without forming any urine, because all of the | |||
water is lost by evaporation. But in very hot, humid weather, a person with a low metabolic rate can be | |||
endangered by the smallest amount of water (e.g., "Meteorological relations of eclampsia in Lagos, Nigeria," | |||
Agobe, et al., 1981). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Most foods contain a considerable amount of water, usually more than 70% of their weight, and some water is | |||
produced in cells by metabolism. The function of water in the organism has been mystified and neglected | |||
because of some deeply rooted cultural images of the nature of organisms and their cellular make-up. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One silly image that has been perpetuated by schools and textbooks is that biochemistry consists of chemical | |||
reactions that occur in substances dissolved in water, and that the water is retained by cells because they | |||
are enclosed by an oily membrane, and because of the osmotic forces produced by the dissolved substances. | |||
Most grade school kids have seen an osmometer made from an egg, in which the egg causes a column of water to | |||
rise, and have heard the explanation that this has something to do with the way cells work. Membrane pumps | |||
are invoked to explain the differences in solute concentrations and "osmotic pressure" inside and outside | |||
cells. The story is that invisible things on the surface of a cell (in its "membrane") force dissolved | |||
molecules to move in ways that they wouldn't move spontaneously by diffusion, and that water passively | |||
follows the "actively transported" solutes. But the evidence shows that both water and its solutes are | |||
regulated by the bulk phase of the cell, not its surface. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In some cultural settings, animism has a kind of charm (water sprites, and such), but in the culture of | |||
medicine and biology, the animistic conceptualization of cells and their mechanisms has been very | |||
destructive, because it gets in the way of coherent understanding of physiology. Practically every disease | |||
would be approached differently if the physiology of water and ions were allowed to advance beyond the | |||
animistic doctrines of mainstream medicine, such as the "membrane pumps." If all the substances that are | |||
said to be "actively transported" by pumps into, or out of, cells are considered, the amount of energy | |||
required to operate the pumps is at least 15 times larger than the total energy available to cells. | |||
"Specific" pumps are commonly invoked even for novel synthetic chemicals, to explain their unequal | |||
distribution, inside and outside cells. In many biological situations water is ignored, but when it becomes | |||
an issue, its distribution is usually mechanistically subordinated to the solutes that are actively | |||
"pumped." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cells aren't osmometers, in the sense the textbooks say. They do control their water content, but no | |||
"membrane pumps" are needed. It's more accurate to think of the water of cells as being "dissolved in | |||
cells," somewhat the way water is contained in jello or boiled eggs. The cell controls its hydration by the | |||
processes that control its structure, its metabolism, and movements, because water is part of its deepest | |||
structures and essential functions. The cell's adjustments to changes of hydration and volume appear to be | |||
regulated by contractile proteins and energy metabolism (Minkoff and Damadian, 1976). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Any stress or energy deficit that disturbs cellular structure or function disturbs the interactions among | |||
water, proteins, and other components of the cell. Excitation causes a cell to take up extra water, not by | |||
osmosis resulting from an increase in the concentration of solutes in the cell, or because the membrane has | |||
become porous, but because the structural proteins of the cell have momentarily increased their affinity for | |||
water. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This increased affinity is similar to the process that causes a gel to swell in the presence of alkalinity, | |||
and it is related to the process called electroosmosis, in which water moves toward a higher negative | |||
charge. Intense excitation or stress increases the cell's electrically negative charges, and causes it to | |||
become more alkaline and to swell. Swelling and alkalinity cause the cell to begin the synthesis of DNA, in | |||
preparation for cell division. Mitogens and carcinogens, including estrogen, cause cells to become alkaline | |||
and to swell, and substances that block the cell's alkalinization (such as the diuretics acetazolamide and | |||
amiloride) inhibit cell division. Prolonged alkaline stress alone can cause malignant transformation of | |||
kidney cells (Oberleithner, et al., 1991). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The general idea of "stress" is useful, because it includes processes such as fatigue, osmotic pressure | |||
changes, disturbed pH, and the enzyme changes that follow, producing substances such as lactic acid, nitric | |||
oxide, polyamines, estrogen, serotonin, and many more specific mediators. But paying attention to the | |||
physical factors involved in a stress reaction is important, if we are to see the organism integrally, | |||
rather than as a collection of "specific biological mechanisms," involving things like the pixie-powered | |||
"membrane pumps." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When a cell shrinks under hyperosmolar conditions, its metabolism becomes catabolic, breaking down proteins | |||
and glycogen, and sometimes producing lactic acid, which results in an alkaline shift, increasing the cell's | |||
affinity for water, and causing it to return to normal size. A slight degree of hyperosmolarity increases | |||
the cell's metabolic rate. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Swelling in hypo-osmolar conditions, i.e,, with an excess of water, is anabolic, leading to cellular | |||
proliferation, and inhibiting the breakdown of protein and glycogen. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Respiring cells are always producing some water, by transferring hydrogen from fuel molecules to oxygen. | |||
Respiration also produces carbon dioxide, which in itself is a Lewis acid (meaning that it binds electrons, | |||
rather than releasing protons), that associates with cellular proteins, acidifying them in the process. A | |||
large amount of carbon dioxide can exist inside cells in the bound form. Acidified cytoplasm (like any other | |||
mostly acidic polymer-gel) releases water and sodium. (This process is physically analogous to the process | |||
of flushing a water softener with salt, or a demineralizer with acid, to reactivate it.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Besides binding with the cytoplasm, the carbon dioxide can be changed into carbonic acid, by chemically | |||
combining with water. Carbonic acid is hydrophilic, and so it quickly leaves the cell, taking with it some | |||
of the oppositely charged ions, such as calcium and sodium. The formation of carbonic acid, which is | |||
constantly streaming out of the respiring cell, causes some water and some positively ionized metals to | |||
leave the cell, in an "active" process, that doesn't require any mysterious pumps. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
As the blood passes through the lungs, carbon dioxide leaves the system, and as carbonic acid is converted | |||
to carbon dioxide, water is left behind in the blood, along with the counterions (of alkaline metals or | |||
earths), accounting for slight differences in pH and osmolarity between the bloodstream and the tissue | |||
cells. Some experiments suggest that the normal osmolarity of various tissues is 2 or 3 times higher than | |||
that of the blood, which is called "isosmolar" or isotonic. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The kidneys adjust the osmolarity of the blood by allowing water and solutes to leave the bloodstream, in | |||
proportions that usually keep the body fluids in balance with cells. The kidneys are able to compensate for | |||
many of the imbalances produced by stress and inappropriate diets, for example by forming ammonia and carbon | |||
dioxide, to compensate for imbalances in the alkalis and acids that are being delivered to the blood by | |||
other organs. Because of the kidneys' great ability to regulate the flow of solutes between the blood and | |||
the forming urine, the "membrane pumps" have great importance for medical nephrologists. But the more | |||
extreme the "active transport" is, the more obvious it becomes that processes other than "membrane pumps" | |||
are responsible. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some lizards and sea birds have glands near their noses that are called salt glands, because of their | |||
ability to secrete salt. The salt gland is probably the most extreme case of active transport, but its | |||
physiology is very similar to the physiology of any other secretory gland or membrane, such as tear glands | |||
and sweat glands. The mechanism of salt excretion in these glands should really settle the issue of how | |||
active transport works, but most nephrologists, oculists, and medical researchers in general aren't | |||
interested in salt glands. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Carbon dioxide is the driving force in the salt gland. The constant formation of CO2, and its loss into the | |||
air, allows a high concentration of salt to be excreted. Blocking the interchange of CO2 and carbonic acid, | |||
with acetazolamide, or inhibiting the formation of CO2, prevents the excretion of salt. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since respiratory metabolism, governed by the thyroid hormone, is our main source of carbon dioxide, it's | |||
obvious that thyroid deficiency should impair our ability to regulate water and solutes, such as salt. An | |||
organism that illustrates this function of thyroid is the young salmon, when it leaves a freshwater river to | |||
begin its life in the ocean. As it converts its physiology to tolerate the salty environment, its thyroid | |||
hormone surges. When it's mature, and returns to the fresh water to spawn, its prolactin rises sharply. In | |||
experiments with rodents, it has been found that drinking a large amount of water increases their prolactin, | |||
but the same amount of water, with added salt, doesn't. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hypothyroidism is typically associated with increased prolactin secretion. Hypothyroid people typically | |||
retain water, while losing salt, so the hypothyroid state is analogous to the salmon that has returned to | |||
the river, and to the mice that drink too much salt-free water. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The typical hypothyroid person loses salt rapidly in the urine (and probably in the sweat, too, though that | |||
is usually diagnosed as cystic fibrosis), and retains water, diluting the urine less than normal. The | |||
reduced production of carbon dioxide, with increased susceptibility to producing lactate and ammonium, | |||
causes the cells to be more alkaline than normal, increasing their affinity for water. The rise of estrogen | |||
that usually accompanies hypothyroidism also increases intracellular pH, loss of sodium, and over-hydration | |||
of the blood. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hypothyroid muscles typically retain excess water, and fatigue easily, taking up more water than normal | |||
during exertion. In childhood, mild hypothyroidism often causes the leg muscles to swell and ache in the | |||
evenings, with what have been called "growing pains." When the problem is more extreme, all the skeletal | |||
muscles can become very large (Hoffman syndrome), because of the anabolic effect of over-hydration. | |||
Enlargement of any muscle can result from the excessive hydration produced by thyroid deficiency, but when | |||
it happens to the muscles behind the eyes (Itabashi, et al., 1988), it often leads to a diagnosis of | |||
hyperthyroidism, rather than hypothyroidism. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The little kids with the Hoffman syndrome don't have the bloated myxedematous appearance that's often | |||
associated with hypothyroidism. They look athletic to a ridiculous degree, like miniature body-builders. But | |||
after a few weeks of treatment with thyroid, they regain the slender appearance that's normal for their age. | |||
The swollen state actually supports enlargement of the muscle, and the cellular processes are probably | |||
closely related to the muscle swelling and growth produced by exercise. The growth of the muscle cell during | |||
swelling seems to be the result of normal repair processes, in a context of reduced turnover of cellular | |||
proteins. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The people who believe in membrane pumps that maintain normal solute distributions by active transport know | |||
that the pumps would require energy (far more than the cell can produce, but they don't confront that | |||
issue), and so their view requires that they assign a great part of the cell's resources just to maintaining | |||
ionic homeostasis, and the result of that is that they tend to neglect the actual energy economy of the | |||
cell, which is primarily devoted to the adaptive renewal of the cell structure and enzyme systems, not to | |||
driving the systems that don't exist. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The "anabolic" balance of the swollen cell is the result of decreased turnover of the cell's components. The | |||
higher rate of metabolism produced by adequate thyroid function maintains a high rate of renewal of the | |||
cell's systems, keeping the cell constantly adjusted to slight changes in the organism's needs. The evidence | |||
of a high rate of bone turnover is sometimes taken as evidence that thyroid can cause osteoporosis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Later, in a more mature person, chronically fatigued and painful muscles that at one time would have been | |||
diagnosed as rheumatism, may be diagnosed as fibromyalgia. Most doctors are reluctant to prescribe thyroid | |||
supplements for the problem, but the association of elevated prolactin with the muscle disorder is now | |||
generally recognized. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The hypo-osmolar blood of hypothyroidism, increasing the excitability of vascular endothelium and smooth | |||
muscle, is probably a mechanism contributing to the high blood pressure of hypothyroidism. The swelling | |||
produced in vascular endothelium by hypo-osmotic plasma causes these cells to take up fats, contributing to | |||
the development of atherosclerosis. The generalized leakiness affects all cells (see "Leakiness" | |||
newsletter), and can contribute to reduced blood volume, and problems such as orthostatic hypotension. The | |||
swollen endothelium is stickier, and this is suspected to support the metastasis of cancer cells. | |||
Inflammation-related proteins, including CRP, are increased by the hypothyroid hyperhydration. The heart | |||
muscle itself can swell, leading to congestive heart failure. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Some of the nerve problems associated with hypothyroidism (e.g., carpal tunnel syndrome and "foot drop") are | |||
blamed on compression of the nerves, from swelling of surrounding tissues, but the evidence is clear that | |||
hypothyroidism causes swelling in the nerve cells themselves. For example, in hypothyroidism, nerves are | |||
slow to respond to stimulation, and their conduction of the impulse is slow. These changes are the same as | |||
those produced by hyper-hydration caused by other means. Hypothyroid nerves are easily fatigued, and | |||
fatigued nerves take up a large amount of water. Swelling of the spinal cord is probably responsible for the | |||
"spinal stenosis" commonly seen in domestic animals and people; the mobility of intracellular water | |||
molecules is distinctly increased in patients with compression of the spinal cord (Tsuchiya, et al., 2003; | |||
Ries, et al., 2001). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The hyperhydration of hypothyroidism has been known to cause swelling and softening of cartilage, with | |||
deformation of joints, but somehow it has never dawned on surgeons that this process would lead to | |||
deformation of intervertebral disks. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It has been known for a long time that hyperhydration can produce seizures<strong>;</strong> | |||
at one time, neurologists would test for epilepsy by having the patient drink a pint of water. Although | |||
there are many reasons to think that the hyperhydration produced by hypothyroidism is a factor in epilepsy, | |||
physicians have been very reluctant to consider the possibility, because they generally think of thyroid | |||
hormone as a stimulant, and believe that "stimulants" are necessarily inappropriate for people with | |||
epilepsy. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While it's true that the thyroid hormone increases sensitivity to adrenaline, its most noticeable effect is | |||
in improving the ability to relax, including the ability to sleep soundly and restfully. And it happens that | |||
increasing norepinephrine (the brain's locally produced form of adrenaline) helps to prevent seizures | |||
(Giorgi, et al., 2004). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Cell swelling increases the sensitivity of nerves, and hyperosmotic shrinkage lowers their sensitivity. | |||
Increasing carbon dioxide helps to reduce the hydration of tissue (for example, the hydration and thickness | |||
of the cornea are decreased when carbon dioxide is increased), and increasing carbon dioxide is known to | |||
inhibit epileptic seizures. Another diagnostic trick of neurologists was to have the patient hyperventilate; | |||
it would often bring on a seizure. The diuretic acetazolamide, which increases the body's carbon dioxide and | |||
reduces water retention, is very effective for preventing seizures. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The sleep-inducing effect of salty food is probably related to the anti-excitatory effects of | |||
hyperosmolarity, of adequate thyroid function, and of carbon dioxide. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Degenerative diseases, especially cancer, heart disease, and brain diseases, are less prevalent in | |||
populations that live at a high altitude. When oxygen pressure is low, the lungs lose carbon dioxide more | |||
slowly, and so the amount of carbon dioxide retained in the body is greater. If the basic problem in | |||
hypothyroidism is the deficient production of carbon dioxide causing excessive loss of salt and retention of | |||
water, resulting in hypo-osmotic body fluids, then we would expect people at high altitude to have better | |||
retention of salt, more loss of water, and more hypertonic body fluids. That has been observed in many | |||
studies. The increased rate of metabolism at altitude would be consistent with the relatively active | |||
"catabolism" of the slightly hyperosmotic condition. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
After the drug companies began, in the late 1950s, marketing some newly discovered (thiazide) diuretics, | |||
which cause sodium to be lost in the urine, their advertising campaigns created a cultish belief that salt | |||
caused hypertension. They convinced a whole generation of physicians that pregnant women should limit salt | |||
in their diet, take a diuretic preventively, and restrict calories to prevent "excessive" weight gain. | |||
Millions of women and their babies were harmed by that cult. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pre-eclampsia and pregnancy toxemia have been corrected (Shanklin and Hodin, 1979) by both increased dietary | |||
protein and increased salt, which improve circulation, lower blood pressure, and prevent seizures, while | |||
reducing vascular leakiness. The effectiveness of increased salt in pre-eclampsia led me to suggest it for | |||
women with premenstrual edema, because both conditions typically involve high estrogen, hyponatremia, and a | |||
tendency toward hypo-osmolarity. Estrogen itself causes sodium loss, reduced osmolarity, and increased | |||
capillary leakiness. Combined with a high protein diet, eating a little extra salt usually helps to correct | |||
a variety of problems involving edema, poor circulation, and high blood pressure. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The danger of salt restriction in pregnancy has hardly been recognized by most physicians, and its danger in | |||
analogous physiological situations is much farther from their consideration. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of the things that happen when there isn't enough sodium in the diet is that more aldosterone is | |||
synthesized. Aldosterone causes less sodium to be lost in the urine and sweat, but it achieves that at the | |||
expense of the increased loss of potassium, magnesium, and probably calcium. The loss of potassium leads to | |||
vasoconstriction, which contributes to heart and kidney failure and high blood pressure. The loss of | |||
magnesium contributes to vasoconstriction, inflammation, and bone loss. Magnesium deficiency is extremely | |||
common, but a little extra salt in the diet makes it easier to retain the magnesium in our foods. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Darkness and hypothyroidism both reduce the activity of cytochrome oxidase, making cells more susceptible to | |||
stress. A promoter of excitotoxicity, ouabain, or a lack of salt, can function as the equivalent of | |||
darkness, in resetting the biological rhythms (Zatz, 1989, 1991). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Bone loss occurs almost entirely during the night, and the nocturnal rise in cortisol and prolactin has | |||
strongly catabolic effects, but many other pro-inflammatory substances also rise during the night, and are | |||
probably the basic cause of the increased catabolism. Increased salt in the diet appears to improve some | |||
aspects of calcium metabolism, such as reducing parathyroid hormone and increasing ionized calcium, when the | |||
diet is deficient in calcium (Tordoff, 1997). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The kidneys can produce large amounts of carbon dioxide and ammonia, in the process of preventing the loss | |||
of electrolytes, while allowing acid to be lost in the urine. The ammonia is produced by the breakdown of | |||
protein. During stress or fasting, the loss of tissue protein can be minimized by supplementing the | |||
minerals, potassium, sodium, magnesium, and calcium. Salt restriction can cause aldosterone to increase, and | |||
excess aldosterone causes potassium loss, and increases the use of protein to form ammonia (Norby, et al., | |||
1976; Snart and Taylor, 1978; Welbourne and Francoeur, 1977). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Aldosterone secretion increases during the night, and its rise is greater in depressed and stressed people. | |||
It inhibits energy metabolism, increases insulin resistance, and increases the formation of proinflammatory | |||
substances in fat cells (Kraus, et al., 2005). During aging, salt restriction can produce an exaggerated | |||
nocturnal rise in aldosterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
During the night, there are many changes that suggest that the thyroid functions are being blocked, for | |||
example a surge in the thyroid stimulating hormone, with T4 and T3 being lowest between 11 PM and 3 AM | |||
(Lucke, et al., 1977), while temperature and energy production are at their lowest. This suggests that the | |||
problems of hypothyroidism will be most noticeable during the night. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rheumatoid arthritis and asthma are two inflammatory conditions that are notoriously worse during the night. | |||
Melatonin has been reported to be higher in patients with severe asthma and rheumatoid arthritis, and to | |||
promote the secretion of a variety of other pro-inflammatory substances. The peak of melatonin secretion is | |||
followed by the peak of aldosterone, and a little later by the peak of cortisol. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The use of bright light (which suppresses melatonin) to treat depression probably helps to inhibit the | |||
production of aldosterone, which is strongly associated with depression. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Both aldosterone and melatonin can contribute to the contraction of smooth muscle in blood vessels. | |||
Constriction of blood vessels in the kidneys helps to conserve water, which is adaptive if blood volume has | |||
been reduced because of a sodium deficiency. When blood vessels are inappropriately constricted, the blood | |||
pressure rises, while organs don't receive as much blood circulation as they need. This impaired circulation | |||
seems to be what causes the kidney damage associated with high blood pressure, which can eventually lead to | |||
heart failure and multiple organ failure. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Progesterone, which helps to maintain blood volume (partly by preventing vascular leakiness, preventing | |||
excessive sodium loss and by supporting albumin synthesis) antagonizes aldosterone. Aldosterone antagonists | |||
are now being recognized as effective treatments for hypertension, water retention, congestive heart | |||
failure, arrhythmia, diabetes, kidney disease, and a great variety of inflammatory problems. (Synthetic | |||
drugs to antagonize aldosterone are most effective when they are most like natural progesterone.) Since | |||
aldosterone contributes to fibrosis of the heart and kidneys (nephrosclerosis), progesterone, the | |||
"antifibromatogenic steroid," should be helpful for those problems that have been considered irreversible. | |||
Aldosterone appears to contribute to the hyperglycemia of diabetes itself, and not just to its | |||
complications, by interfering with the interactions of insulin and cortisol (Yamashita, et al., 2004). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
One of progesterone's fundamental actions is to cause estrogen "receptors" to disintegrate; hypertonicity | |||
has this effect in some situations. Estrogen's effects are largely produced by increased tissue hydration. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Aldosterone causes cells to take up sodium, while increasing their pH, i.e., raising their alkalinity | |||
(Mihailidou and Funder, 2005). Intracellular sodium has long been known to be a factor, along with swelling | |||
and alkalinity, in stimulating cell division (Cone and Tongier, 1971). A lack of salt stimulates the | |||
formation of serotonin, which in turn stimulates aldosterone synthesis--that is, a sodium restricted diet | |||
activates processes that cause cells to take up sodium inappropriately, in a situation reminiscent of the | |||
calcium deficient diet causing inappropriate calcification. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Aldosterone, like stress or hypo-osmolarity, activates the enzyme (ODC) which produces the polyamines, that | |||
promote cell division, and that can probably account for some of the harmful effects of excessive | |||
aldosterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Eating salty food around bedtime usually has a sleep-inducing effect, and it helps to maintain blood volume | |||
(which tends to decrease during the night), and to restrain the nocturnal rise of aldosterone, and other | |||
indicators of stress or inflammation. Eating gelatin, which lacks tryptophan, will reduce the formation of | |||
serotonin, and is likely to limit the formation of aldosterone. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Pregnenolone can sometimes very quickly allow swollen tissues to release their water. This function is | |||
probably closely related to its antifibromatogenic function, since swelling and leaking set the stage for | |||
fibrosis. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Hyperosmotic sodium chloride solutions (e.g., 7.5%) are being used more often for treating trauma and shock, | |||
because the concentrated solution increases blood volume by removing water from the extravascular spaces, | |||
unlike the "isotonic" saline (0.9% sodium chloride), which usually adds to the edema by leaking out of the | |||
blood vessels. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A 5% sodium chloride solution is effective for promoting healing of damaged corneas, and solutions of 5% to | |||
10% sodium chloride are effective for accelerating the healing of wounds and ulcers. Other hypertonic | |||
solutions, for example glucose or urea, have been used therapeutically, but sodium chloride seems to be the | |||
most effective in a variety of situations. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Thyroid hormone, by maintaining oxidative metabolism with the production of carbon dioxide, is highly | |||
protective against excessive water retention and loss of sodium and magnesium. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Sometimes doctors recommend that constipated people should drink extra water, "to soften the stool." The | |||
colon is where water is removed from the intestinal contents, and when it is inflamed, it removes too much | |||
water. Several decades ago, it was recognized (Orr, et al., 1931) that hypertonic saline, given | |||
intravenously, would stimulate intestinal peristalsis, and could be used to treat paralytic ileus and | |||
intestinal obstruction. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When water is taken orally, it is absorbed high in the intestine, long before it reaches the colon, so the | |||
recommendation to drink water for constipation can produce a situation that's the opposite of intravenous | |||
hypertonic saline, by diluting the blood. Using a hypertonic salt solution as an enema can have the same | |||
beneficial effect on the intestine as the intravenous treatment. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Constipation physiology is probably analogous to the physiology of congestive heart failure, in which | |||
muscles are weakened and fatigued by swelling. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In recent decades, the prevalence of congestive heart failure has increased tremendously, so that it is now | |||
often called an epidemic. Hyponatremia (too little salt, or too much water) is a recognized "risk factor" | |||
for congestive heart failure. In the failing heart, the muscle cells are swollen, causing the heart wall to | |||
stiffen, weakening its ability to pump. Osmotically shrinking the cells can restore their function. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The swollen heart, like any muscle, loses the ability to quickly and completely relax, and so it doesn't | |||
fill adequately between contractions. Elastic tissues, such as arteries and lungs, stiffen when they are | |||
over-hydrated, losing their normal functions. In small blood vessels, swelling narrows the channel, | |||
increasing resistance to the flow of blood. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When people force themselves to drink a certain amount of water every day, even when they don't feel | |||
thirsty, they are activating complex adaptive processes unnecessarily. Thirst is the best guide to the | |||
amount of fluid needed. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When extra water consumption is combined with a low salt diet--as physicians have so often recommended--a | |||
healthy person can adapt easily, but for a hypothyroid person it can have disastrous effects. | |||
</p> | |||
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Effective water clearance and tonicity balance: the excretion of water revisited. | |||
</strong> | |||
Mallie JP, Bichet DG, Halperin ML. "OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate (1)<strong> | |||
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and (2) that the measure "effective water clearance" (EWC</strong>) provides better information about | |||
renal defence of the body tonicity than does the classic measure free-water clearance, and to provide the | |||
rationale for calculating a "tonicity balance," which involves using water and sodium plus potassium intakes | |||
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</strong> | |||
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</strong> | |||
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</p> | |||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2009. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
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<head><title>Can art instruct science? William Blake as biological visionary</title></head> | |||
<body> | |||
<h1> | |||
Can art instruct science? William Blake as biological visionary | |||
</h1> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong><em>"As the true method of knowledge is experiment, the true faculty of knowing must be the faculty | |||
which experiences."</em></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong><em>"Seest thou the little winged fly, smaller than a grain of sand? It has a heart like thee; a | |||
brain open to heaven & hell...."</em></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p><strong><em>"Energy is the only life, and is from the Body.... Energy is eternal delight."</em></strong></p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong><em>"Then tell me, what is the material world, and is it dead?" He, laughing. answer'd: "I will | |||
write a book on leaves of flowers, if you will feed me on love thoughts & give me now and then A | |||
cup of sparkling poetic fancies; so, when I am tipsie, I'll sing to you to this soft lute, and shew | |||
you all alive The world, where every particle of dust breathes forth its joy." (1794)</em></strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<hr /> | |||
<p> | |||
When I started studying William Blake in the 1950s, it seemed that only English majors knew who he was, but | |||
today, I think more people might recognize The Tyger as Blake"s than would be able to identify poems by | |||
Keats, Byron, Shelley, or Wordsworth. After 200 years, his writing seems contemporary, while other poets" | |||
works have become dated, and are valued mostly as cultural background. But I don"t think this means that his | |||
work is any easier to understand than it was when he wrote it. It means that other poets tied their writing | |||
to frameworks which have receded into the background, while Blake"s words were chosen in a way that allowed | |||
them to travel across the centuries without loss. Even though such universality is a goal of science as well | |||
as of art, most of what passed for science in the 18<sup>th</sup> century is today of only historical | |||
interest. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Everywhere in our culture, authoritarian ignorance has disproportionate influence. Most of the published | |||
work in our culture treats the succession of authoritarian academic/scien- tific/political cults as if this | |||
were simply the way history and human nature work, and must work. But this mechanical historical process is | |||
only superficial, and below this surface, individuals and groups have always lived as though time behaved | |||
very differently for them. William Blake was a person who investigated this discrepancy between official | |||
cultural progression, and real human possibility, and his ideas might be able to do essentially what he | |||
suggested they could do<strong>:</strong> Provide a way to by-pass the officially established mechanistic | |||
view of reality, into a more fully human reality. Since Blake ridiculed established doctrines in medicine, | |||
chemistry, mathematics, and Newtonian physics, many people have dismissed him as a religious nut, but the | |||
way in which he criticized them indicates that he simply believed that they were bad science<strong | |||
>;</strong> he also criticized conventional art and morality, because he believed that they were destroying | |||
art and morality. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A group that was active in the 1950s, called Synectics, developed several mental procedures that they found | |||
to be useful in teaching people to solve problems creatively. These included ways to improve thinking by | |||
analogy, to get people out of the ruts of conventional thinking. Personification, fantasy, biological | |||
imagery, "making the familiar strange," they found, seemed to tap into natural biological and mental | |||
processes to increase the ability to direct energy toward valid solutions to practical or artistic problems. | |||
They found that experts had to overcome their special knowledge before they could usefully solve problems in | |||
"their field," and they showed that much of the mystery could be removed from the creative process. Simply | |||
putting aside dogmatic mental frameworks was crucial. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When you believe that you have adequate, expert knowledge, a passive, logical, deductive form of mental | |||
activity seems appropriate. Deduction always goes from a higher level of generality to a lower level of | |||
generality. Mental passivity therefore is likely to be associated with the belief that we have the decisive | |||
knowledge already stored in memory. If we believe that we <em>create</em> higher degrees of generality, as | |||
appropriate solutions to novel problems, then we are committed to an active mental life. Perception, | |||
combined with the discovery and invention of new patterns in the world, will be actively oriented toward the | |||
future, while the deductive, merely analytical, manner of thought will be tied to the past. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake"s work, I think, is of continued and increased interest because he discovered something of great | |||
importance, namely, how to avoid dogmatisms of all sorts. Many students who are assigned to write about a | |||
poem of Blake"s are puzzled, and ask what it means. When they find out that they understand the words and | |||
the syntax, it turns out that the only problem was that they were taught that they had to "interpret" | |||
poetry. And that they don"t think he could have meant what he said. Most twentieth century students are too | |||
stodgy to accept Blake"s writing easily. In the 1950s, some people couldn"t understand Alan Ginsberg"s | |||
poetry, because they didn"t think anyone was allowed to say such things. That is the kind of problem | |||
students have with Blake. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
But it"s not just high school and college students who can"t believe that Blake meant what he said. I | |||
recently reviewed the comments on The Tyger that have been published in the forty years since I wrote my MA | |||
thesis on Blake, and it seems that these academic experts are having the same kind of problem. Dostoyevsky | |||
wrote about this problem in The Double"it is the problem of self-assertion, of seeing oneself reflected | |||
everywhere in the world. In Dostoyevsky"s story, Dream of an Odd Fellow, the theme is stated even more | |||
clearly"the world is very boring, and <strong><em>everything seems the same as everything else,</em></strong | |||
> until you can escape from a certain interpretive framework, to see what is really present to you. In | |||
Blake"s phrase, if the many become the same as the few when possessed<strong>,</strong> "more, more," is the | |||
cry of a mistaken soul<strong>;</strong> Blake said, over and over, that the many do not become the same as | |||
the few, that we are always moving into a new world as we learn more, except when we find ourselves in the | |||
mental manacles of interpretation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It"s easy to forget how pervasive philosophical interpretation is in everyday life and in the so-called | |||
sciences, and how much the sciences owe to long-standing theological commitments. Within the last | |||
generation, many influential people have said that facts don"t matter (and I suspect that their favorable | |||
reception has owed everything to that attitude.) In the early 1960s, there was a controversy going on | |||
between two schools of thought in linguistics and the philosophy of science, the Katz and Fodor controversy. | |||
I think Fodor was in the minority at that time, at least among the most prestigious professors in the United | |||
States. Fodor said that if we wanted to know about language, we should find out how the language is used, by | |||
watching a variety of people using it. His opponents said that, if they were competent to speak the | |||
language, they didn"t need to do anything except to think, to understand everything about the language. | |||
Fodor was an empiricist, his opponents were rationalists. In mathematics, most people are still | |||
rationalists. A large school of contemporary thought about computers, called "Artificial Intelligence," is | |||
operating within a rationalistic framework. Chomsky"s "generative grammar" was ultra-rationalistic, and was | |||
easy to set up in computers, though it was perfectly useless in itself. Some physicists hold a philosophy of | |||
science that is essentially rationalistic. In Plato"s time, <em> | |||
all knowledge</em> could supposedly be derived by introspection and the analysis of innate ideas, and | |||
education consisted in "drawing out" the knowledge that was innate. (Aristotle, who didn"t subscribe to | |||
Plato"s rationalism, has nevertheless been blamed for holding opinions that weren"t sufficiently supported | |||
by observation. This was probably because he occasionally relied on the opinions of others, rather than | |||
because of any serious defect in his philosophical-scientific method.) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
It"s important to remember that Rationalism, as used here, isn"t simply a "love of reason," which is what is | |||
often meant when people speak of "rationalism." In its historical use among philosophers, rather than being | |||
just a devotion to rationality, it is a specific doctrine which denies that experience is the source of | |||
knowledge. Historically, Rationalism has been closely allied with mysticism, as an affirmation that | |||
knowledge comes from a source beyond the ordinary world of experience and beyond the individual. At the | |||
present time, it serves authoritarian science rather than authoritarian theology, though the basic doctrine | |||
is the same. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Several contemporary schools of literary theory, sociology, anthropology, even biology, trace their ideas | |||
back to Ferdinand de Saussure"s analysis of language, reading into it a highly rationalistic doctrine for | |||
which there is no actual basis. Saussure"s most important idea was that it is impossible to analyze language | |||
into its structural units without simultaneously seeing its use in relation to the world of meanings. | |||
Without its meanings, it just isn"t language. This is a profoundly anti-rationalist insight, since it shows | |||
that symbols take their existence from the experience of communication. But once the symbols exist, they | |||
function by the ways they establish distinctions, "this" being defined by the ways it has been used in | |||
distinction to "those," "that," etc. Every time a word is used, its meaning changes a little, since every | |||
use occurs in a new communicative situation. The contemporary rationalistic academic trends prefer to | |||
isolate only the principle of "meaning through opposition," since it supports the rationalistic illusion of | |||
operating strictly on the symbolic level. The "symbolic level" is only an abstraction, and doesn"t exist | |||
independently. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A few decades ago, there was a movement called General Semantics that tried to make people more conscious of | |||
the way symbols relate to reality. Their ideas were based on a distinction between the "concrete" use of | |||
symbols, and the various levels of abstraction. These distinctions, however, made sense only within a | |||
certain theory of how language works, which I think was wrong<strong>: </strong>It asserted that, if time | |||
and space were divided into sufficiently small units, symbols and language could be precise and factual. It | |||
ignored the distinction between reality as experienced, and reality as represented in theory. If you keep | |||
subdividing a person, John Smith, into smaller moments, you find that there is nothing that represents the | |||
known person. The person that you are really referring to is actually a summation of many moments"the | |||
summation is the only "concreteness." The person you know is a synthesis, and it is that imaginative | |||
synthesis of facts to which the concrete symbol refers. Generality exists in our knowledge of the world, and | |||
the distinction between concrete and abstract is likely to create confusion, and reinforces a specific | |||
ideological system. Incidentally, the word "concrete" derives from the roots "grown" and "together," so it | |||
is very close in its core meaning to "synthesis." A well constructed generalization can be concrete, and a | |||
seemingly simple term, such as "electron," can be "abstract." (Blake said that a line, no matter how finely | |||
divided, was still a line; a line exists in our imaginative synthesis of the world, and it is only a denial | |||
of that synthesis that can divide its unity into "infinitesimals.") | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Mathematics has its value in representing certain relationships or patterns, but the rationalistic illusion | |||
that the meaning is independently contained and fulfilled by the "algorithm," has led many people into | |||
dogmatisms and serious errors. "Coefficients of reality" are often neglected. In practice, you are not very | |||
likely to be mistaken if you assume that mathematical descriptions of physical states are always erroneous. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the 17<sup>th</sup> and 18<sup>th</sup> centuries, progress in technology and industry was already making | |||
rationalism seem inadequate, but it still served the social purpose of allowing the ruling class to claim | |||
that the doctrines it wished to enforce had the support of timeless, innate and universal principles. There | |||
was supposed to be a Great Chain of Being, a hierarchy in which the king and the lords were just below the | |||
angels, and Reason was a mathematically clear description of the way things were, and should be. As the | |||
chain of being finally broke up at the end of the 18<sup>th</sup> century, the king brought in the Rev. | |||
Malthus to explain how war, poverty, and disease served the divine, or kingly, purpose, by controlling | |||
population growth, justifying misery and social antagonism in a new way. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
There were philosophers, such as John Locke and David Hume, who argued that much of our knowledge is gained | |||
through the senses, and there were satirists, such as Henry Fielding, who ridiculed the supposedly divinely | |||
sanctioned class system, but Blake took a much simpler, but more radical position, in saying that "Reason | |||
isn"t the same that it will be when we know more," and that reason is only the ratio of things that are | |||
presently known, and not the source of new knowledge. Blake kept the idea that experience is the source of | |||
knowledge, without reducing "experience" to the "senses." Blake didn"t deny the existence of some innate | |||
ideas<strong>;</strong> he didn"t think we were born as a "blank slate," but there is more to the mind than | |||
what we are born with. Imagination and invention and mental striving were able to generate new forms. This | |||
commitment to experience as the source of knowledge, rather than just analyzing a stock of "innate ideas," | |||
made Blake"s world one that was oriented toward the future, toward invention and discovery, rather than to | |||
memory, established knowledge, and tradition. In its essence, it was antidogmatic. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rationalism is a system of symbols, in which each symbol is demonstrated to have its own proper place and | |||
status. To the extent that reason is held to be "innate," the system will be prescriptive and judgmental, | |||
rather than simply descriptive, explanatory, and illuminating. When an alternative system is proposed, it | |||
may be considered a "heresy," if the system from which it dissents is both rationalistic and authoritarian. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Except for the dangers involved in committing a heresy, it is very easy to follow the implications of the | |||
system that one finds in one"s own mind, since self-assertion contains no principle of corrective | |||
contradiction. Essentially, <strong>rationalism consists of thinking something is true because you thought | |||
of it. | |||
</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
I think of the philosophical Rationalists as being the bureaucrats of the mind, making everything tedious | |||
and boring and repetitive. Eliminating Rationalism, then actual individualized full mental life can begin. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Even a heresy, if it is based on rationalism, is past-oriented, and dogmatic. Over the years, scholars have | |||
ascribed most of the important heresies, as well as mainstream religious ideas, to Blake. Whatever | |||
interpretive system the scholars favor, they are able to find it in Blake"s work. Calling Blake "a mystic" | |||
is especially useful when the goal is to claim that the critic is getting at the deepest levels of meaning | |||
in Blake, even though there is no clear meaning for the word in contemporary English, and Blake didn"t use | |||
the term in a way that suggested he would approve of having the word applied to himself. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake"s notes written in the margins of books make it clear that he wasn"t simply adopting anyone"s | |||
doctrinaire opinions, and that he was able to find useful ideas in the thoughts of others even when he | |||
disagreed with them on important issues. Blake was not a rationalist, but he agreed with Bishop Berkeley"s | |||
understanding of the importance of distinguishing thought from language. He recognized that Descartes, | |||
Locke, Hume, Newton, had inadequate ideas about the nature of "matter," but he didn"t accept the simplistic | |||
doctrine of extreme rationalism that matter doesn"t exist. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When people consider Leonardo de Vinci, they usually make the point that he had mastered every field of | |||
knowledge, and so the question of "sources" and "influences" doesn"t come up. In the 18<sup>th</sup> | |||
century, London was the cultural center of the world<strong>; </strong> | |||
European, Asian, and ancient cultures and ideas were discussed in books, magazines, and conversations. Being | |||
an engraver, a painter, a poet, and a political activist, Blake"s circle of acquaintances was as wide as | |||
anyone"s could be. England has had, probably since the 17<sup>th</sup> century or earlier, a counter-culture | |||
of opinionated dissenters. I suspect that the people who spent several years studying the classics for a | |||
university education were somewhat culturally deprived, relative to the people who participated in the rich | |||
unofficial culture, where new ideas in art, science, and philosophy were being discussed. London was also | |||
the center of a world-spanning empire, a tyrannical class-system, and an industrial-commercial revolution. | |||
The past and the possible futures could be seen from Blake"s vantage point. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Among all the published opinions about things that influenced Blake, I have seen only a few discussions of | |||
his treatment of scientific ideas, mainly his rejections of Newton"s mathematical and physical assumptions, | |||
and very few comments on Blake"s position on the major philosophical controversies of his time. A biologist, | |||
Jacob Bronowsky, wrote a book about Blake, but Bronowsky"s own biological, historical, and linguistic ideas | |||
were relatively conventional. Even though Blake"s work is full of images from biology, the critics ignore | |||
the fact that Emanuel Swedenborg published very advanced biological research in the middle of the 18<sup | |||
>th</sup> century, and that Erasmus Darwin was known for presenting his ideas on biological evolution in | |||
poetry (especially Zoonomia). The title of Blake"s book, The Four Zoas, has apparently never led scholars to | |||
ask whether it had anything in common with Zoonomia. Even though Blake made many disparaging remarks about | |||
Swedenborg"s religious books, many people have claimed that Blake was influenced by Swedenborg"s religious | |||
doctrines, while ignoring the possible influence of the scientific work. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although the idea that "contradiction produces change" is associated with Hegel"s "Dialectic," it was an old | |||
and well known theme in philosophy. When Blake"s idea, that "without Contraries there is no progression," is | |||
seen in context, I think it is appropriate to think that to a great extent, Blake derived the idea from a | |||
consideration of the sexes. "Generation," so often discussed in relation to the biblical "fall of man," | |||
always leads to the issue of the productive interaction of the sexual contraries. The issue of sexual love | |||
permeates Blake"s work. I suspect that Blake produced even more explicitly sexual work, but since most of | |||
his work wasn"t really published, when his wife died in 1831, the bulk of his manuscripts and paintings were | |||
subject to the whims of their unsophisticated owners. But on the basis of his existing work, it is | |||
reasonable to say that sexual and imaginative energy was the motor that Blake saw producing intellectual | |||
advancement. This male-female principle of change was more fully explored by Blake than by anyone | |||
previously, since he made it concrete and personal, rather than abstract. Working in history, human energy | |||
ran into the constrictive, limiting elements, the tyrannies of policy, philosophy, and commerce. For Blake, | |||
the interaction of energy with those limits became a philosophy of freedom and revolution. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
While Blake discussed the importance of perception in understanding the world, he was remarkable in the care | |||
he took to make it clear that he saw the world "all alive," in which grains of dust or sand, birds, worms, | |||
ants, flies, etc., perceived and experienced in ways that were not different from those of human life. | |||
Bishop Berkeley, who said that the material world outside the philosopher"s mind doesn"t exist, added as an | |||
afterthought that it exists in the mind of God. If consciousness is the only guarantee of existence, there | |||
was no problem in the existence of Blake"s world, in which everything was alive and conscious. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Everyone finds it almost obligatory to describe The Lamb as a symbol for Jesus, but then they find the | |||
Tyger"s symbolic meaning more problematic, and"from Coleridge in the early 19<sup>th</sup> century down to | |||
the newest publications at the end of the 20<sup>th</sup> century"people are boggled by the "obscurity" of | |||
The Fly. But in that poem, Blake makes it clear that there is no obscure symbolism, when he says "then am I | |||
a happy fly, if I live or if I die," etc. The animal poems are expressions of Blake"s evolutionary, | |||
vitalistic, cosmology. The tyger, at least, would be too much for a creationist doctrine to handle. If worms | |||
and flies and ants are conscious and in the same situation as human beings, the bonds of sympathy and | |||
forgiveness are universal. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In a world that"s alive and developing, new knowledge is always possible, and imagination has the prophetic | |||
function of reporting the trends and processes of development, illuminating the paths toward the future. | |||
Reason is subordinate to invention and discovery. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The dualistic conception of matter as distinct from energy and consciousness is a constrictive illusion put | |||
in place by the forces of empire, and the living reality would be freed from the inert husks of the wrongly | |||
conceived natural world, when in the future the world was freed of tyranny. After Blake, it would be nearly | |||
another century before others would see that the crude materialism of Newton and the Natural Philosophers | |||
was essentially a life-denying culmination of the worst trends of official religious dogma. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A complete survey of Blake"s references to Christianity would be voluminous, and not all of them are | |||
immediately clear<strong>, </strong> | |||
and require a careful placing in the context of the ideas that were being discussed in London at that time. | |||
But it"s hard to reconcile the common description of him as a mystic with his reference to "Old Nobodaddy | |||
aloft," or with his comment that Jehovah gives us a knock on the head, and Jesus soothes it. He always | |||
defines god in human terms, so from the conventional viewpoint, he would probably be considered as an | |||
atheist or pantheist, but he didn"t describe himself or his friends as atheists. When people called Tom | |||
Paine an atheist, Blake defended him against the charge. Other friends, Mary Wollstonecraft and William | |||
Godwin, were sometimes called atheists, but in their writings, they never expressed very unconventional | |||
religious ideas. When we recall that in the early 1990s, George Bush expressed the idea that atheism should | |||
be illegal, it is easy to imagine that people in 18<sup>th</sup> century England wouldn"t have felt that it | |||
was safe to be called atheists. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In 1803, Blake apparently said something like "damn the king," while getting a drunk soldier out of his | |||
yard, and was tried for sedition or treason. He was acquitted, because his far more scurrilous written | |||
comments hadn"t been published, and it didn"t occur to the government to look for documentary evidence to | |||
support their case. The fact that he printed his own work, and sold only a few copies of his books to | |||
affluent friends, probably saved his life, but it accounts for his obscurity during his own lifetime. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Tom Paine"s writing was published and widely read in prerevolutionary America, but he was considered a | |||
criminal in England, and Blake was credited with saving his life by helping him escape to France. | |||
Politically and ethically, Blake"s writing is similar to that of Paine, Godwin, and Wollstonecraft (often | |||
called the "first feminist"), but his language is usually more vivid. It was probably the clarity of his | |||
political opposition that made his work unpublishable during his lifetime. The first "complete" collection | |||
of his work was published in 1927, and until that year, very few people had seen more than a few of his most | |||
famous poems. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake printed his work by hand, without a press, by writing the text backwards on copper plates, surrounded | |||
by his drawings, and then etching away the surrounding copper, so that the image remained elevated, and | |||
could be inked and printed as if it were a wood-block. If he hadn"t devised this method for printing a few | |||
copies of his books, it isn"t likely that much of the work would have survived. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Shortly after the French Revolution, William Wordsworth was associated with the Blake-Wollstonecraft-Godwin | |||
group"s defense of the revolution, but he moved away from the ideals of that group, and adopted more | |||
socially acceptable ideas. He finally became England"s poet laureate. Liberty, equality, and brotherhood | |||
were replaced by blandly conformist ideas. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The type of individualism that Wordsworth came to advocate was interesting because it was a rejection of | |||
exactly that part of Blake"s belief that Blake considered to be the essence of Christianity, namely, | |||
forgiveness, brotherhood, and bonds of sympathy connecting all beings. In its place, Wordsworth adopted a | |||
memory-centered doctrine. During Wordsworth"s lifetime, his ideology was exceedingly successful, but its | |||
rationalistic overtones have kept it tied to the past<strong>;</strong> it had nothing to offer the future. | |||
I think we can get some insight into Wordsworth"s mind by considering that, on the basis of reading Blake"s | |||
<em>Songs of Innocence and Experience,</em> he decided that they were written by an insane person. (Blake | |||
was aware that slow-witted people, who couldn"t follow unconventional thoughts, often considered him to be | |||
crazy.} | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Everywhere in Blake"s work, it is clear that he never underestimated the possibilities of the future, and | |||
never imposed false limits onto anything, but he didn"t tolerate vagueness or empty abstraction. Sharp | |||
definition was essential, and unique particulars were the basis for beauty and knowledge. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
For Blake, the dialectical principal was a feature of the world itself, but it also informed his method, his | |||
technique, and his "rhetoric." One of Blake"s powerful insights was that intellectual clarity is achieved by | |||
contradiction, opposition, contrast, making distinctions as well as comparisons. The principle of | |||
intensification through opposition had special features when it was developed in his painting and writing. | |||
Blake gave much of the credit for his style of thinking to the process of spending thousands of hours in the | |||
practice of etching. The image you create in the conventional etching technique is made when acid "bites" | |||
into the lines that will be inked<strong>;</strong> | |||
in Blake"s new technique, the image is made permanent by the acid"s corroding away of everything except the | |||
sharply defined image. The decisive, dividing, line is essential. Anyone who has spent even a few hours of | |||
intense effort working in dry-point or etching understands that, when you stop, the appearance of the world | |||
is altered by changes that have taken place in your eyes and brain. Often, his "metaphors" are literal | |||
imaginative insights that have great generality. This kind of knowledge distinguishes the work of a | |||
craftsman from that of an academic. The probability is that Blake"s art led him to appreciate compatible | |||
ideas when he found them, and it doesn"t seem likely that he was "influenced" by them the way an academic is | |||
influenced by books, since Blake had his own "sources" that are generally neglected by intellectuals. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake found that contrasts made meanings clear, and made language vivid. Heaven and Hell, Clod and Pebble, | |||
Lamb and Tyger, Angel and Devil, Greek and Jew, Innocence and Experience, presented contrasts that | |||
encouraged the reader to think about the range of possibilities Blake had in mind. He was always consciously | |||
trying to energize the reader"s mind to get out of dogmatic ruts, to look at things freshly, so he often | |||
used the polarities in ways that would surprise the reader, ironically reversing familiar references. A | |||
pious commonplace would be contrasted with the disturbing realities that it normally hid. Both in his | |||
writing and in conversation, Blake was often playful and teasing, and over-serious people have usually taken | |||
him too literally. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Academic commentators are so often attached to their erudite pieties that it seems that they can"t read | |||
English. In the 18<sup>th</sup> century, a clod meant just what it means in the 20<sup>th</sup> century, | |||
either a lump of dirt, or a lunkhead. In the Clod and the Pebble, when the Clod speaks the properly | |||
sanctimonious phrases, justifying its oppressed misery with a dogma, we have a clue regarding Blake"s | |||
attitude, but then he makes it perfectly clear by speaking of Heaven"s despite, literally, Heaven"s malice | |||
(a concept that appears many times in different forms in other parts of his work). Either the commentators | |||
assume that the word "despite" had a different meaning in the 18<sup>th</sup> | |||
century (it didn"t), or they assume that Blake made an error of diction, because they choose to alter the | |||
meaning to "despite Heaven." Just as judges aren"t allowed to change the wording of the laws that they | |||
interpret, literary experts aren"t allowed to rewrite texts to make them better suit their interpretation. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The same insensitivity to the world of concrete experience that has allowed so many commentators to read | |||
their own ideas into Blake, ignoring what he said in plain English, makes satire and irony and sarcasm | |||
inaccessible to many people who otherwise seem intelligent<strong>;</strong> this is especially apparent | |||
when scientists comment on literature. Forming an imaginative synthesis of the writer and his meaning | |||
requires mental flexibility and energy, rather than just analytical acuity. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Everyone who described Blake"s physical appearance remarked on his large head. Blake commented that he | |||
didn"t like to travel or undergo physical strain, because of its effects on his health. The brain is an | |||
energetically expensive organ, which consumes large amounts of glucose. A very large brain puts a special | |||
burden on the liver"s ability to store energy, and is likely to make a person conscious of physiological | |||
processes. Blake"s descriptions of the process of seeing show that he was integrating his experience into | |||
his knowledge, describing brain physiology, incorporating his perceptions and the best scientific knowledge | |||
that was available to him, into a philosophical description of the place of conscious life in the world. The | |||
pulsation of an artery was the unit of time, a red blood corpuscle was the unit of space, enclosing eternity | |||
and infinity, eliminating arbitrary and abstract entities, and placing human life within cosmic life, while | |||
revealing cosmic life within the individual. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The idea of a "biological cosmos" seems strange only when it is considered against an ideology which | |||
maintains that life is alone in an immense dead universe. The assumption of a dead, unintelligent, randomly | |||
moving physical world is the creation of a series of theological ideas, which Blake perceived as essentially | |||
Satanic. Blake used the language of these theologies, but inverted them, showing the ways they were used to | |||
obscure reality, and to impose a perverse way of life onto the living world. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Fred Hoyle, the astronomer, said "If this were an entirely scientific matter, there is little doubt from the | |||
evidence that the case for a fundamentally biological universe would be regarded as substantially proven." | |||
(1989) | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Over the last few decades, biologists feel that they have established the "biochemical unity of life," in | |||
which biochemical cycles and genetic codes are widely shared. The idea of ecological interdependence has | |||
come to be recognized as an essential part of life, or (as demonstrated by Vernadsky, and suggested by | |||
Hoyle) a cosmic principle. Blake often called himself a Christian, and defined Christianity in many novel | |||
ways, as art, love, politics, science, but specifically, in his version of Christianity, forgiveness was an | |||
essential idea, and nothing lives for itself only. Blake"s Christianity as Art was a concrete part of | |||
living, and he ridiculed some of the abstract theosophical definitions of god that were common in his time. | |||
When his remarks are considered against the background of Spinozistic pantheism, it is the intensification | |||
and personalization, the avoidance of abstractions that could permit the attribution of passivity or | |||
inertness to any part of reality, that stand out. When he said that the world is alive, he meant that it is | |||
a defect of perception that makes Newton"s world seem passive, empty, and dead. A few years ago, a movement | |||
that called itself "deep ecology" tried to absolutize the ideas of ecology<strong>;</strong> | |||
Blake"s view of the interactive unity of life was as well thought out as any that preceded Vernadsky"s | |||
cosmology. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Rather than elevating any of the ideas of Christianity to an absolute doctrine, Blake used them as parts of | |||
an organic whole. The principle of forgiveness was presented as the appropriate response to a world which is | |||
always new. The desire for vengeance comes from a delusive commitment to the world of memory. Virginity is | |||
constantly renewed in the world of imaginative life. While Blake said that you can"t forgive someone until | |||
they stop hurting you, the desire to be forgiven indicates that there is an opportunity to resolve the | |||
problem. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although most mathematicians and computer-so-called-scientists are committed to a rationalistic, | |||
past-oriented view of their mental operations, and some scientists accept that ideology along with | |||
mathematics, the valid, discovery-oriented sciences have to be future-oriented. A first step in avoiding | |||
dogmatic assumptions might be phrased as "remembering what you are," a living being, and asking how you know | |||
things<strong>: </strong> | |||
The interaction with other beings, exchanging energy and information with the environment, experiencing | |||
yourself in the world. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Holistic medicine and holistic psychology came into existence as attempts to overcome the dogmatic | |||
compartmentalization of reality that is endemic. Whenever rigidity is a problem, looking for ways to create | |||
new patterns that by-pass the petrified pattern can lead to a solution. Parkinson"s disease and other | |||
physical problems have been approached using techniques of intensified or varied stimulation. Increased | |||
stimulation--even electromagnetic stimulation-- appears to open alternative patterns. Music, dance, and | |||
swimming have been used successfully to improve fluidity in various neurological diseases. Kurt Goldstein | |||
(<em>The Organism</em>) worked with brain injuries, and found that the brain has a variety of ways to | |||
restore a new balance. Raising the amount of energy that"s available can allow natural processes to create a | |||
better synthesis. Political and social problems that are culturally determined may follow rules similar to | |||
those of organic brain disease. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Optimal assumptions, when assumptions are necessary, are those that don"t commit you to undesirable | |||
conclusions. For example, in the 1950s, some people made the assumption that nuclear war was inevitable, and | |||
made large investments in "fallout shelters," which were conceived in terms of world war II bomb shelters, | |||
and so resources were diverted from other investments, such as education, which didn"t in themselves | |||
foreclose future possibilities. Self-fulfilling prophecies and self-limiting assumptions are often built | |||
into supposedly practical activities. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
The assumption that cancer is genetically determined, and the assumption that regeneration is impossible in | |||
the heart or brain, are self-limiting assumptions that have been immensely destructive in biology and | |||
medicine. There was no reason to make those assumptions, except for the rationalist culture. Physics, | |||
biology, and cosmology are manacled by many unnecessary assumptions. The limits of adaptation, the extent of | |||
life"s potential, can"t be discovered unless you look for them, but the sciences have built many artificial | |||
limitations into their systems. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Avoiding unnecessarily limiting assumptions, looking for patterns rather than randomness, looking for larger | |||
patterns rather than minimal forms, avoiding reliance on verbal and symbolic formulations, expecting the | |||
future to be different"these are abstract ways of formulating the idea that the world should be seen with | |||
sympathetic involvement, rather than with analytical coldness. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Almost everything which has been denounced as "teleological" has turned out to be much closer to the truth | |||
than the mechanistic views that were promoted as "more scientific," and many horrors have been committed by | |||
people who have said that nature shouldn"t be "anthropomorphized," that subjective feelings shouldn"t be | |||
attributed to "the experimental material." The surgeons who operate on babies without anesthesia are | |||
operating on the assumption that any being which can"t say "I"m going to sue you" is unable to experience | |||
pain. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
When we analyze the ideas of chemical reaction equilibrium (burning something, for example), or biological | |||
adaptation or growth or learning, and see that they are strictly directional in time (which is the basic | |||
meaning of "teleological"), and consistent with Aristotle"s description of causality, we can see the | |||
mysticism that has been imposed on our culture with the idea that "teleological explanations are | |||
unscientific." | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake was clearly aware that the reason for making limiting assumptions was to maintain control, and to | |||
profit from another"s suffering. Seeing that the sadistic assumptions that were put in place to regulate | |||
human life rested on a dichotomizing of soul from body, Blake"s correction was to replace them with a unity | |||
of consciousness and substance, a living world rather than a dead world. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
An imaginative study of his work has the potential to rouse one"s abilities and to open an unlimited world | |||
of possibilities. "I give you the end of a golden string, Only wind it into a ball, It will lead you in at | |||
Heaven"s gate, Built in Jerusalem"s wall." Blake knew that his work, like anything new in the world, could | |||
be understood only by an active mental process. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Every communicative act is original, and understanding it is an invention, a projection, <strong><em>an | |||
imaginative synthesis.</em></strong> We can sometimes finish another person"s sentence, the way we | |||
anticipate the notes in a melody<strong>;</strong> we predict the intended meaning. If the symbols carried | |||
the meaning in a passive rationalistic way, the person receiving the symbols would receive nothing new. <em | |||
>Intellect is a process of imaginative synthesis, or it is nothing.</em> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake devised "a system" that would make it possible to think about the world without unconsciously making a | |||
commitment to the false limits. He showed, by working within this new philosophical synthesis, that Art, | |||
Science, and Politics are structurally and substantially interdependent. The question I asked in the title, | |||
"can art instruct science?" isn"t the right question once you see the world from Blake"s perspective, since | |||
Science is Art, and both must be based on experience and imagination. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake used, in a new way, the things that were available in his culture, to reveal the process of creation, | |||
on all its levels. He consciously used language in a new way, to free the reader from the stereotypes of | |||
conventional language. His methods are relevant, as he knew they would be, for other times and situations. | |||
</p> | |||
<p></p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong> | |||
NOTES AND QUOTATIONS</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
I happened to read Swedenborg's scientific work just as I was getting interested in concentrating on | |||
becoming a biologist, and I realized that it was his scientific knowledge that shows up in Blake's imagery, | |||
far more than his theology, which Blake obviously despised. By chance, just after I finished my master's | |||
thesis on Blake, I got a job at a Swedenborgian college (Urbana University), where I saw in traditional form | |||
the small minded theologism that Blake had seen in Swedenborg. As a result of those experiences, I greatly | |||
appreciated the book, <em> | |||
The Heaven and Hell of William Blake,</em> by Gholam-Reza Sabri-Tabrizi, which apparently hasn't been | |||
very well received academically. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Blake"s imagery indicates that he had a great interest in the physical and biological sciences, and he | |||
apparently had some direct contacts with the leading scientists in London, some of whom are lampooned in <em | |||
>Island in the Moon. | |||
</em>Some of Swedenborg"s discoveries were probably discussed in these groups. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Although Swedenborg"s original works in anatomy and physiology were probably his most impressive | |||
contributions, he was also a pioneer in paleontology, cosmology (the nebular hypothesis, in particular), | |||
magnetism, crystallography, metallurgy, and endocrinology. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
E. P. Thompson"s <em>Witness against the Beast</em> is an extremely valuable source for clarifying Blake"s | |||
vocabulary. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<em>Synectics,</em> | |||
W. J. J. Gordon, Harper & Row, 1961. Describes how metaphorical thinking was used for solving practical | |||
problems, in the Synectics Research Group in Cambridge, Mass. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In the "scientific" philosophies of Blake"s time, it was common to speak of matter and its primary and | |||
secondary qualities. Blake understood that this view of matter was a derivative of awful theologies<strong | |||
>:</strong> | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"And this is the manner of the Sons of Albion in their strength | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
They take the Two Contraries which are calld Qualities, with which | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Every Substance is clothed, they name them Good & Evil | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
From them they make an Abstract, which is a Negation | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Not only of the Substance from which it is derived | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
A murderer of its own Body: but also a murderer | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Of every Divine Member: it is the Reasoning Power | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
An Abstract objecting power, that Negatives every thing | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
This is the Spectre of Man: the Holy Reasoning Power | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
And in its Holiness is closed the Abomination of Desolation" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
[Jerusalem, 10] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
What is a Church and What Is a Theatre? are they Two & not One? can they Exist Separate? | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Are not Religion & Politics the Same Thing? Brotherhood is Religion | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
O Demonstrations of Reason Dividing Families in Cruelty & Pride! [Jerusalem plate 57] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
And he who takes vengeance alone is the criminal of Providence; | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
If I should dare to lay my finger on a grain of sand | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
In way of vengeance; I punish the already punishd: O whom | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Should I pity if I pity not the sinner who is gone astray! [Jerusalem plate 45] | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
<strong>"Imagination has nothing to do with memory."</strong> (comment on Wordsworth). <strong>"Knowledge is | |||
not by deduction, but Immediate by Perception or Sense at once."</strong> | |||
(comment on Berkely). | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
With Demonstrative Science piercing Apollyon with his own bow! J12.14; E155 | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Generalizing Art & Science till Art & Science is lost. J38.54; E185 | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
"For Art & Science cannot exist but in minutely organized Particulars" | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
Since the difference between a Rationalistic view of the world and a creative view is largely a question of | |||
the reality of time, it"s worth mentioning the work of an astronomer whose cosmological view was based on | |||
the reality of time:"Possibility of experimental study of properties of time," N. A. Kozyrev, Russian, | |||
September 1967, USIA document in English, 49 pages, 1971. J. Narlikar more recently did similar work, | |||
including his collaboration with H. Arp, described in Arp"s<em> | |||
Seeing Red: Redshifts, Cosmology, and Academic Science,</em> Apeiron, Montreal, 1998. | |||
</p> | |||
<p> | |||
© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com | |||
</p> | |||
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