Showing posts with label Obesity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obesity. Show all posts

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Alzheimer’s Diabetes Brain New Theory Insulin Lack Toxic to Brain as are Nitrosamine Meats and Very Low LDL

Tags: Alzheimer's Cause Brain Toxins New Theory Diabetes of Brain Low Insulin, Nitrosamine Meats, Very Low Density Lipoproteins, Diabetes, Obesity, Fructose triglycerides into very low LDL, Uric Acid

Alzheimer’s Diabetes Brain New Theory Insulin Lack Toxic to Brain as are Nitrosamine Meats and Very Low LDL

Our brain uses more sugar than any other part of our body. Diabetes of the brain is especially damaging to the neurons.

Bottom Line: Fructose metabolizes in the liver to triglycerides which further metabolizes to Very Low Density Lipoproteins which are toxic to the brain, one cause of Alzheimer's Disease. High source High Fructose Corn Syrup in processed soft drinks, (Sunkist soda equals 6 Breyer Oreo Ice Creams) processed foods, and Fast Foods Including most drinks including Starbucks Mocha (660 calories 95 grams sugar) and McDonalds coffee drinks and shakes enormous amounts of this sugar.

Diabetes off the Brain when insulin resistance results from High Fructose Corn Syrup and sucrose sugar. The difference is that the syrup can be place in much higher amounts in food and drinks without crystallizing out, and High Fructose makes foods more palatable.

Diabetes and Obesity mushroomed when Reagan in the mid-1980s, without FDA testing, subsidized corn to very high levels to make High Fructose Corn Syrup very cheap to help the processed food corporations greatly improve their profits and replaced sucrose as the sweetener of choice. Placement in soft drinks is probably the major cause of the diabetes, Obesity, and Alzheimer's crisis. Americans consume about 150 lbs yearly of this metabolic poison.

Nitrates used in preserving hot dogs, deli meats and some cheeses, turn into deadly nitrosamine which is toxic to our brain.

Very low density lipoproteins are toxic to our brain. Produced from triglycerides in the liver.

Fructose metabolism also produces uric acid from our cells after destroying them by destroying the mitochondria. Uric acid causes inflammation of the blood vessels leading to higher blood pressure and possibly inflamed brain protective membrane. Recent data shows that uric acid range is too high and uric acid levels (test) should be below 4.5 for males and lower for females. Most uric acid comes from the cell metabolism of fructose. Colas and juices, especially apple and grape juice have high amounts of fructose. Almost all processed foods still contain high levels of High Fructose Corn Syrup.
Fructose metabolism in the liver does lead to cirrhosis in a similar manner as sucrose and alcohol metabolism.

Using Round Up weed killer over our genetically modified crops results in residual toxic chemicals left on the food crop. Whether they cause any of our common diseases or bad health is unknown. Corporate producers do not allow academics, unless under contract, to study whether these foods are safe. Clinton and Bush approved their use after being convinced by Monsanto and other lobbyists and placing their top lobbyist in one step to the top in our FDA probably helped with the approval process without testing!

The theme of the Dr. Oz Show, ABC 3:00 PM, daily, was that what we eat can cause Alzheimer’s Disease. Dr. Suzanne DeLaMonte, a neuropathologist at the Rhode Island Hospital, appeared on the Dr. Oz show www.doctoroz.com to explain her new findings on the cause of Alzheimer’s Disease. Before appearing on the show, Dr. Oz discussed it with many brain Scientists at Columbia who have been on the gene kick forever, including a Nobel Prize winner, and they apparently found Dr. DeLaMonte’s work well done.

I expressed my skepticism about so much emphasis on genes causing Alzheimer’s for many years. I explained that both genetic (Body can’t degrade very low density lipoproteins easily) and late onset Alzheimer’s are caused by a similar mechanism. Very low density lipoproteins. The LDL we get from routine blood tests includes it, but does not tell us how much of the deadly very low density lipoproteins are there.

Alzheimer’s and Obesity starting in the mid-1980s when Reagan arbitrarily approved synthetic High Fructose Corn Syrup using an enzymatic process starting from corn sugar developed by Japanese scientists in 1971. However corn was too expensive to make this sugar commercial. Reagan changed that by subsidizing corn in the mid-1980s so greatly that farmers make most of their minor income from just the corn subsidy which taxpayers provide which forces farmers to maximize their production of corn or starve.

The corn to ethanol program was also a partial subsidy for the farmers and high profits for the producers of ethanol. The higher demand increases the price of corn and its production so other food crops are now scarce causing a sharp rise in prices. Corn prices have doubled in the last several years. If we include all use of oil for its production, we really do not lessen the use of oil.

Why High-Fructose Syrup Causes Insulin Resistance: Dr. Mercola’s Comments: According to the latest statistics, new cases of diabetes have increased by 90 percent in the last 10 years, and diabetes or pre-diabetes now strikes one in four Americans. Those are absolutely astounding statistics to say the least.

There’s no doubt in my mind that one of the primary fuels for this epidemic is the excess consumption of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS). Several studies over the past few years have also come to this conclusion, including this latest study in Cell Metabolism, in which the researchers note:

“Insulin resistance is a common feature of the metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Both have reached epidemic proportions worldwide with the global adoption of the westernized diet along with increased consumption of fructose, stemming from the wide and increasing use of high-fructose corn syrup sweeteners.

It is well established that fructose is more lipogenic than glucose, and high-fructose diets have been linked to hypertriglyceridemia, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and insulin resistance.” ...

Recently, I briefly discussed the narrowness of thinking about gene being relevant in most Alzheimer's cases about a recent article by Kolata of the NY Times http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/04/health/04alzheimer.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=Alzheimers%20Gene&st=cse about a large study showing that about ten genes were correlated (note correlated) with Alzheimer’s in a worldwide combining of DNA structure gene data. Sharon Begley, well ahead of we common folks in seeing the forest instead of the trees. Now with Newsweek, now a great news magazine, commented Alzheimer's: Still Barking Up the Wrong Tree? http://www.sharonlbegley.com/alzheimer-s-still-barking-up-the-wrong-tree while at the Wall Street Journal.

Other related articles by Begley: http://www.newsweek.com/2011/02/27/i-can-t-think.html http://www.newsweek.com/2010/08/05/the-limits-of-reason.html that researchers think and do research in such a narrow field that they are unable think beyond that. …

Wikipedia Fructose: … Fructose Metabolism By The Brain Increases Food Intake And Obesity, Review Suggests (Mar. 26, 2009) — Scientists have built on the suggested link between the consumption of fructose and increased food intake, which may contribute to a high incidence of obesity and type 2 ... > read more ... See PDF.

Jim Kawakami, April 9, 2011, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Microbes Digestive Intestines Obesity Malnutrition Crohn’s Healthy or Sick

Tags: Gut Microbes Type Influence Our Health, Obesity, Alzheimer's, Depend on Diet, High Fructose Dangers


Many of our health problems arise not from our genes, but whether the genes are turned off or on which can be influenced by diet, vitamin D3 from pills or sun without sunscreens, and possibly even all the chemicals we take whether from antibiotics, hormones, food we eat and drink. We are what we eat and drink which influences the type of gut microbes we carry around.


When I lived in Los Angeles, the medications I had to take daily were causing me daily bouts of either diarrhea or constipation. It was driving me crazy. When I moved to Eugene, Oregon, I finally decided on a diet with foods that normally cause diarrhea with foods that cause constipation. After making adjustments on the way, I now have a perfectly regular healthy feces twice a day on a high fiber diet. Even my rice is brown which takes 50 minutes to cook, not the 20 minutes for White Rice which is fiber stripped just like almost all processed foods to cut microwave time and cooking time at the manufacturing plant.


The main point of this research below was to show that lab grown gut microbes under anaerobic conditions behave similarly to the original digestive track microbes. Human microbes were successfully transplanted to mice.


As I reported earlier, a woman near death from antibiotic resistant C. Difficile bacteria was given a small sample of healthy gut microbes from her husbands feces which saved her life and allowed her to leave the hospital in several weeks. Her husband’s microbes replaced the wife’s one which was not able to fight the resistant bacteria with one that could.


Two important lessons. The composition of the gut microbes is strongly determined by what we eat. A common American diet of fat and sugars (High Fructose Corn Syrup prepared enzymatically from corn sugar to pure fructose and glucose.) gives a different profile of microbes from one that is based on high fiber, non-meat, vegetables, and fruits, not fruit juice which has a much higher content of fructose. This diet makes us crave sugar and fat and can lead to demential or Alzheimer's Disease among others.


Our digestive intestinal track is the second brain and immune system which creates hard to deny hunger pangs for more sugar and fat in a typical American diet, especially in manufactured foods free of fiber, flavor, and loaded with high fructose corn syrup and countless additives to make it palatable and preserve it for years. The nutrition guru, Pollan at the University of California, Berkeley, says that anything that contains more than 5 additives should be rejected. Eat when hungry, but eat slowly chewing extra well, and eat food you like that is free of sugar as much as possible. Fructose metabolizes to lipids that are likely responsible for dementia, obesity, and metabolic syndrome.


Jim Kawakami, March 23, 2011, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com


ScienceDaily (Mar. 23, 2011) — http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/03/110321162001.htm Each of us carries a unique collection of trillions of friendly microbes in our intestines that helps break down food our bodies otherwise couldn't digest.


This relationship between humans and their microbes is generally a healthy one, but changes to the mix of microbes in the digestive tract are suspected to play a role in obesity, malnutrition, Crohn's disease and other ailments.

Now, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis show they can grow and manipulate personalized collections of human intestinal microbes in the laboratory and pluck out particular microbes of interest.

The research sets the stage for identifying new probiotics and evaluating in preclinical trials whether microbe transplants can restore the natural balance of intestinal bacteria in "sick" microbial communities.

The research, by Jeffrey I. Gordon, MD, the Dr. Robert J. Glaser Distinguished University Professor and director of the Center for Genome Sciences & Systems Biology, and his team is reported online March 21 in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. ...

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Obesity, Causes Dementia, NY Times Slant on HFCS sugar, Metabolism of Fructose Deadly By-Products, Uses a lot more HFCS in Manufactured foods

Tags: Obesity, Causes, Dementia, NY Times Slant on HFCS sugar, Metabolism of Fructose Deadly By-Products, Uses a lot more HFCS in Manufactured foods

When the study was done implicating obesity with saturated fats, the effect of HFCS on obesity was not considered.


For some people statins do seem to cause dementia so it is difficult to interpret these studies indicating statins reduce dementia, but even in studies that concluded statins have no effect, certain people in the study had marvelous results.


More recent studies seem to indicate that the ratio of High Density Lipoproteins to triglyceride ratios is a more indicative indicator of both heart disease and related dementia. My conclusion is that it does contribute to age related dementia even though data is not air tight yet.


Sometimes making a conclusion contrary to corporations driven information is a good thing. I did not believe that sunscreens with only UVB (burning rays) really protected us from melanoma when I read articles that said Melanoma mushroomed in both Australia and Sweden after the introduction of sunscreens. Instead of really thinking through this problem, they blamed the tanning salons which compete with Big Pharma and even prevented FDA approval for a perfectly good UVB and UVA sunblock from France for 15 years while Canada did approve it.


I also observed that soups with partially hydrogenated "low fat" made me sleepy in the 1980s. Several years ago, it was reported that trans fats reduce blood flow in our arms by half! I never embraced eating this unnatural fat in processed foods which also led me to eat much less Fast Foods.


We do know from Brain studies covered by www.charlierose.com that the presence of an Apolipoprotein E gene reduces our ability to lower certain fats in our blood leads to earlier dementia. But as we all know, patients are not always easy to diagnose, and the overload of medical articles has made it impossible to keep current on such a complex organ as the brain.


With the increase incidence of dementia in Americans who are overweight or obese indicates

age related dementia is correlated with low density lipoproteins and triglycerides, but no proof has been obtained. When science fails, I use common sense with information.


pastedGraphic.pdf


http://www.obesity.org/statistics/

Obesity in 1985 when Reagan started heavily subsidizing corn to produce very cheap High Fructose Corn Syrup HFCS so much that it became almost free. The obesity rate was less than 10% in California and 10-14% in most obese states. http://www.scribd.com/doc/2465772/CDC-trends-in-obesity-1985-2001 Now 27 states in 2007 had 25%-29% obese people including children and 20 states have 20%-24% obese individuals!

The NY Times article below quotes only those who say there is no difference between cane sugar and HFCS, but a Princeton study did show recently that when equal calories of cane sugar or HFCS were fed to mice, the latter mice ate a lot more mice chow. They are certainly chemically different even though they made up of similar components. Here is my excerpted blog on that.


THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

Fructose Brain Metabolism Increases Food Intake and Glucose Does Not



Fructose Brain Metabolism Increases Food Intake and Cane Sugar Fructose-Glucose Does Not


http://jimboguy.blogspot.com/2010/07/fructose-brain-metabolism-increases.html

Some really good scientific research on sugar goes back to the 1970s, but the majority of science projects accelerated when Obama started funding the NIH (National Institutes of Health) and National Science Foundation (NSF) which was sharply cut by the Bush anti-science mentality so scientists had to rely more heavily on corporation grants which limited them from doing projects which may hurt businesses such as Big Agriculture Food Conglomerates controlling what we eat, sunscreens and Big Pharma.


Sometimes it takes a little effort and quiet to absorb information unfamiliar to us.

Do not miss video by Dr. Robert H. Lustig, M.D., UCSF Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism This video is 90 minutes and really does an easy to understand explanation about the deadliness of a high fructose diet, chiefly from soft drinks. The second short video shows that drinking sugary soft drinks is equivalent to drinking fat. Fructose metabolized in the liver produces about 30% triglycerides, possibly more dangerous to our health than saturated fats.


www.DrMercola.com website is a good place to get health information, but like most things, checking the primary source such as Dr. Lustig and Dr. Richard J. Johnson, University of Colorado Denver Medical Center The Sugar Fix: The High Fructose Fallout that is Making You Fat and Sick is the best way to convince yourself to contradict the propaganda or PR such as in the website www.sweetsurprise.comwhich is a firm that corporations hire to contradict strong scientific evidence about their food products health problems. Google ads can be from anyone and often contradicts the scientific article.


Sweet Surprise: Rachel Maddow, http://rachel.msnbc.com and http://maddowblog.msnbc.com are great places to get lots of factual, well researched, information. You may be surprised that very few news stories give you facts that contradict commercial interests. …


Now 58 Percent of Americans Think High Fructose Corn Syrup is Bad for Them, NY Times, Tara Parker-Pope Sept 14, 2010. … Because higher levels of enzyme converted corn sugar has been used extensively and at high levels in soft drinks, Gatorade, ketchup, and prepared foods to make them palatable.


(Note the influence of advertisers and food producers on how Parker-Pope slants the article by contradicting what has been reported in the NY Times at least several times. Jim)


According to the market research firm NPD Group, about 58 percent of Americans say they are concerned that high-fructose corn syrup poses a health risk.

Some scientists over the years have speculated that high-fructose corn syrup may contribute to obesity by somehow disrupting normal metabolic function, but the research has been inconclusive. As a result, most leading scientists and nutrition experts agree that in terms of health, the effect of high-fructose corn syrup is the same as regular sugar, and that too much of either ingredient is bad for your health. … (See Dr. Lustig video above! What Parker-Pope does not mention is that HFCS can be put into foods at much higher levels because it does not crystallize out as cane sugar does when frozen. Jim)

Table sugar comes primarily from sugar cane or sugar beets. High-fructose corn syrup is made essentially by soaking corn kernels to extract corn starch, and using enzymes to turn the glucose in the starch into fructose. The ingredient is a favorite of food makers for practical reasons. Compared with sucrose, high-fructose corn syrup doesn’t mask flavors, has a lower freezing point and retains moisture better, which is useful in making foods like chewy granola bars. And because the corn crop in the United States is heavily subsidized, high-fructose corn syrup is also cheap. As a result, it’s now used in so many foods, from crackers to soft drinks, that it has become one of the biggest sources of calories in the American diet.

But the public perception of high-fructose corn syrup as unhealthful has prompted many food companies to stop using it (how many?) in their products, including Hunt’s Ketchup, Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice and Wheat Thins crackers. … http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/14/a-new-name-for-high-fructose-corn-syrup/?ref=health

Friday, July 2, 2010

Fructose Sugars High Blood Pressure Cause Corn-Fructose Producers Object

Tags: Fructose, High Blood Pressure, Uric Acid, Cell Death, Inflammation vessels, organs, obesity, high triglycerides

Studies by Richard J. Johnson, MD, Nephrologist, also at the same University in Denver also showed the strong connection with Uric Acid and high blood pressure. “The Sugar Fix: The High-Fructose Fallout That Is Making You Fat and Sick.”


A sweet problem: Princeton researchers find that high-fructose corn syrup prompts considerably more weight gain

by Hilary Parker, March 22, 2010, http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S26/91/22K07/


A Princeton University research team has demonstrated that all sweeteners are not equal when it comes to weight gain: Rats with access to high-fructose corn syrup gained significantly more weight than those with access to table sugar, even when their overall caloric intake was the same.

In addition to causing significant weight gain in lab animals, long-term consumption of high-fructose corn syrup also led to abnormal increases in body fat, especially in the abdomen, and a rise in circulating blood fats called triglycerides. The researchers say the work sheds light on the factors contributing to obesity trends in the United States.


"Some people have claimed that high-fructose corn syrup is no different than other sweeteners when it comes to weight gain and obesity, but our results make it clear that this just isn't true, at least under the conditions of our tests," said psychology professor Bart Hoebel, who specializes in the neuroscience of appetite, weight and sugar addiction. "When rats are drinking high-fructose corn syrup at levels well below those in soda pop, they're becoming obese -- every single one, across the board. Even when rats are fed a high-fat diet, you don't see this; they don't all gain extra weight." http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S26/91/22K07/


Richard Johnson, MD, also reported in the same peer reviewed journals that the metabolism of fructose in our cells uses up ATP,


Wikipedia: … Metabolic processes that use ATP as an energy source convert it back into its precursors. ATP is therefore continuously recycled in organisms: the human body, which on average contains 250 grams (8.8 oz) of ATP[3] turns over its own weight in ATP each day.[4] …


The structure of this molecule consists of a purine base (adenine) attached to the 1' carbon atom of a pentose sugar (ribose). ... When ATP is used in DNA synthesis, the ribose sugar is first converted to deoxyribose by ribonucleotide reductase. … http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adenosine_triphosphate

which turns into purine on cell death and the purine is converted to Uric Acid. Recent publications has proved that uric acid inflames the blood vessels which prevents expansion of the blood vessel so blood pressure increases to get enough blood through the vessels. The higher blood pressure in kidneys increases even more much so that kidneys function goes down. It was reported a few weeks ago in the online Nephrology publication. Also when kidney patients are treated to reduce uric acid, kidney deterioration slows down considerably.

jim kawakami, July 02, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Study: High-Fructose Diets May Raise Blood Pressure

Added Sugar May Be Linked to Hypertension Risk

By Denise Mann

WebMD Health News

Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD


July 1, 2010 -- Foods and beverages with high amounts of fructose from added sugar may increase your risk of developing high blood pressure, according to a new study in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. High blood pressure is a major risk factor for heart attack and stroke.

A type of sugar, fructose is a key ingredient in table sugar and high-fructose corn syrup. Added sugars are found in processed foods such as candy, cookies, and cakes, as well as soda.

For the study, data on 4,528 U.S. adults were collected from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey in 2003-2006. Fructose intake was calculated based on self-reported diet information. Those participants who reported eating or drinking 74 grams of fructose or more per day (which the study equates to 2.5 sugary soft drinks per day) had a higher risk of high blood pressure than their counterparts who got less fructose. The findings took into account factors such as age, smoking history, physical activity level, and salt and alcohol intake.

However, the study doesn’t prove that fructose was the cause for the rise in risk.

A link between added sugars and blood pressure is controversial. There are several theories about how fructose affects blood pressure levels, but none is firmly established. For example, high-fructose corn syrup may raise uric acid levels, which have been linked to high blood pressure.

“Limiting fructose intake is readily feasible, and in light of our results, prospective studies are needed to assess whether decreased intake of fructose from added sugars will reduce the incidence of hypertension and the burden of cardiovascular disease in the U.S. adult population,” conclude researchers who were led by Diana I. Jalal, MD, of the University of Colorado Denver Health Sciences Center in Denver.

Study Flawed, Critics Say

Not so fast, according to The Corn Refiners Association, a national trade group based in Washington, D.C., and others.

The Corn Refiners Association takes issues with the findings and the methodology used in the new study. “The authors failed to learn the true composition of sweeteners used in caloric soft drinks,” according to a statement released by the group. “Caloric soft drinks are not sweetened with 100% fructose. The sweeteners they contain are comprised of almost equal portions of the two simple sugars fructose and glucose, because they are sweetened with either sucrose (table sugar) or high fructose corn syrup (corn sugar).” … http://www.webmd.com/hypertension-high-blood-pressure/news/20100701/study-high-fructose-diets-may-raise-blood-pressure

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Resistance of Average Doctors to Apply Harmless Vitamin D Treatments to Fix Immune System

Tags: South Beach Diet, HFCS, Obesity, Fruit juice, High BP, Uric Acid, Vitamin D Cures Pneumonia

My friends who live in Miami and love South Beach and loved the South Beach Diet which seems to work well. When I was talking to my investment advisor today, she said that she used the South Beach Diet and she mentioned that one thing the authors said about High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS). She said that the book's author said that when they use to eat foods and drinks with HFGS they were hungry all the time! Fruit juice probably has more Fructose than Coke and Pepsi which is pushed as a healthful drink by some doctors! It takes a number of blemished oranges or apples to make one small glass of orange or apple juice.

Metabolism of Fructose in the liver produces glucose going to stored glycogen and the harmful LDLP, uric acid, and triglycerides. In addition Fructose somehow stops our ability to produce Leptin which prevents over-eating and the hormone Ghrelin produced by the Omentum or belly organ which grows in size as we eat too much.

My Doctor Lisa Emond, decided to give me a uric acid test, an insulin test, and the comprehensive one to determine such things as fasting glucose, pH of the blood, and other health parameters. Uric acid was tested routinely in the past, but stopped based on conclusions which has been to shown wrong by Richard Johnson in "The Sugar Fix: The High-Fructose Fallout that is Making You Fat and Sick" and a Journal of the American Medical Association or JAMA in 2008.

We must remember that even Nobel Prize winners can be wrong based on the assumptions they made by selecting data available at that time that supported their theories. We paid that price during the recent Financial Meltdown that led the World to the Great Depression. No one has a lock on the absolute truth. We are all flawed and the more we realize that, the closer we would come to making the right decisions most of the time by being open to opposing rational views.

Below is a letter by a woman to Dr. Cannell who runs the www.vitamindcouncil.org which reports on recent academic work by leading scientists on the wonders of vitamin D. When she was told by a team of doctors that her mother will die within 5 days, she forced them to give her a test of vitamin D and they agreed on 5,000 IU. Without the knowledge of the doctors she gave her mother 30,000 IU of vitamin D daily and she remarkably got a lot better!

Dr. Cannell told the daughter that we are working in an unknown area, but he is recommending boosting the dose every day to 50,000 IU and a few other vitamins including vitamin K2 until she gets over the lung infection.

Jim Kawakami, April 14, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Vitamin D Council

4/13/2010

Dear Dr. Cannell:

My 71 year old mother is in the hospital diagnosed with Pseudomonas pneumonia. Because she also has COPD along with years of prednisone use, her doctors have given her only a 5% chance of survival. The hospital is against patients taking any supplements without doctors orders (they kind of have a don't ask/don't tell policy on supplements), but they have prescribed her Vitamin C and zinc. But they failed to prescribe any Vitamin D.

Under my insistence, six months ago my mother had her vitamin D levels tested and found out she was critically low. So she has been taking 5,000 IU a day since then. But after finding out she had Pseudomonas, unknown to her doctors, I have been giving my mother 30,000 IU of vitamin D for the last 5 days (based on the studies I saw about Pneumonia and Vitamin D). The first few days she had a fever of 99+, but these last 2 days her temperature has returned to NORMAL. Needless to say, her doctors are astounded. They fully expected her to be near death now. But out of fear I am not planning on informing them of her Vitamin D intake unless/until after she fully recovers.

At any rate, I do not want you personal medical advice. But because you have studied Vitamin D so thoroughly, I wanted to ask you,
based on the studies and research out there, is 30,000 IU enough for this? Does research show if it is safe or beneficial to take more for this condition? Is there any other cofactors that research shows would be beneficial as well? Really, what has the research shown?

Thank you for any information you can provide. It will be simply wonderful if Vitamin D actually ends up saving my Mother's life.

Much kind regards and thank you for all you do.

Linda Thomas, New York

Dear Linda:

Increase her dose to 50,000 IU per day and continue that dose until she is fully recovered and then reduce it to 5,000 IU per day. Doses of 50,000 IU per day should only be used by critically ill people; they are safe to take for many weeks. This is to be used in addition to her antibiotics, not instead of them.

There is no direct or even much indirect science to support my advice. However, I cannot fail to give my best advice and let your mother die. As far as co-factors, vitamin D needs many but magnesium, zinc, boron, and vitamin K2 are the ones most people are deficient in.

Good reason exists to think that the antimicrobial peptides that vitamin D upregulates (increases) will be effective in a wide variety of infectious disease that peaks in the wintertime, such as pneumonia and meningitis.

I hope your letter may have the effect of reaching others who may be in similar situations.

John Cannell, MD

Executive Director

Vitamin D Council

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Monday, April 12, 2010

Stick to coffee, tea or water; skip the liquid HFCS sugar

Tags: High Fructose Corn Sugar, Obesity, Wrinkles, Impotence, Heart Disease, and Memory Loss

Appeared in print: Monday, Mar 22, 2010

... Drinking liquid sugar is like extending an invitation to obesity, wrinkles, impotence, heart disease and memory loss. So for now, if the drink has calories in it, leave it in the can. ...

Sucrose or cane or beet sugar was not used in large quantities in prepared foods because it could crystallize out during cold storage and can lead to spoilage on storage. Treating carbohydrates such as corn starch with an enzyme to produce glucose was well known, but has only 60% of the sweetness of fructose so a new expensive enzyme was found which produced High Fructose Corn Syrup or HFCS was still too expensive to compete with table sugar or sucrose. Two Japanese scientists in 1971 found a relatively cheap way to convert corn to fructose and glucose at varying ratios by attaching the enzyme to a substrate in a column so this enzyme could be re-used. The High Fructose Corn Syrup has 55% Fructose and 45% Glucose or HFCS. But imported cane sugar was very cheap so it could still not compete with regular sugar compose of 50:5O Fructose-Glucose called sucrose which most plants make.

As often done by the Reagan and Bush administration, profits for corporations trumps all other considerations including safety or health of the American consumers. So they started in the mid-eighties to heavily subsidize corn and ban imports of sugar by imposing a heavy tariff and they declared HFCS SAFE without testing just like they did not test GMO corn and soybeans for our safety. The liquid high fructose corn syrup had one very big advantage over table sugar. It could be added to foods frozen after preparation without sugar crystallizing out which was a god-send to producers of prepared foods.

We all have a sweet tooth so producers started putting it into just about all prepared foods and fast foods or as a sauce or dip or dressing. It is almost impossible to eat at most restaurants and fast food joints without taking a large dose of HFCS.

The big problem is that our bodies did not develop a good way to handle large amounts of fructose in the liver and glucose with Insulin. But the HFCS causes obesity because it prevents our appetite satiation to shut down our hunger hormone Ghrelin from our belly Omentum so we keep eating until we are stuffed. We eat more when we are distracted from the eating process by television.

Chewing your food 20 times before swallowing is one way to eat slow enough to not overeat providing you skip soft drinks and other high HFCS sugar containing stuff such as fruit juices. Apple juice and oranges juices don't tell you how much fructose you are taking in. Obviously it is enough to make Americans the fattest people on the planet with high blood pressure, diabetes, kidney failures, heart attacks, strokes, and cancer.

ABC has a show where Jamie, a Chef is trying to get the very obese people in Huntington, West Virginia to change what they are eating by learning to cook easy to prepare good food. Even our government guideline for school lunches lists French Fries as one of the necessary vegetables. Of course our Dept of Agriculture does not support the farmers, but support the guys who make the most money from the food farmers grow. Just five companies are involved directly in providing the raw material for all foods we eat.
But they also give us to have another big load of sugar from carbohydrates by stripping fibers from grain flour to cut cooking time and easy frozen storage. In a more recent article Roizen and Oz of ABC's 3 PM ET/PT very popular daily health show, they write about all the dangerous fibers these corporations are adding to make profits.

Jim Kawakami, April 12, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Dr Roizen of the Cleveland Clinic and Dr Oz of Columbia University
We recently received a letter touting the new measures that a giant beverage company is taking to “support first lady Michelle Obama’s initiative to combat obesity.”

The company is putting labels on the front of its sugary sodas that state the calorie contents of the entire can or bottle. Until now, the calories were listed “per serving” and appeared somewhere on the side or back.

It’s not enough. Shifting those stats front and center may appear more honest and transparent, but it sure doesn’t make these products any healthier.

If a company wanted to be upfront, then the damage or aging that the beverage does should be on its front.

For example: “Drink a six-pack of this a day and make your arteries 12 years older and your memory disappear nine years earlier, and be 26 pounds heavier in just five years.”

It’s not just sodas that are loaded with sugar and calories — and we mean loaded. One can of soda packs 10 teaspoons of sugar. Other drinks that are sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup or just plain, old-fashioned sugar — many iced teas, fruit drinks, lemonade, energy-boosters and sports drinks — help deliver 47 percent of all the added sugar we consume.

To make matters worse, the sheer quantity of soft drinks guzzled has skyrocketed a staggering 500 percent in the past 50 years. How much are we swigging? In 2008, the beverage industry pumped out 47 gallons of soda for each American (yes, gallons).

All that liquid sugar isn’t just making us fat. It’s also increasing our risk for deadly diseases such as diabetes, metabolic syndrome and heart disease. So don’t be fooled by soda labels that appear to bare all. Stick with these smart sips instead:

Water: It keeps you hydrated, has zero calories and costs nothing, so make it your go-to beverage. Think you need to down eight glasses a day? Maybe not, though it certainly won’t hurt. The latest word on water is that unless you sweat up a storm in the gym or live in a sweltering climate, thirst is the best indicator of how much you need. Keep your water habit environmentally friendly by toting your own reusable water bottle instead of filling landfills with disposable ones.

Tea (green and black): More people worldwide drink tea than any other libation, aside from water.

That’s good news, because it’s one heart-smart drink. Downing three or more cups a day has been shown to decrease heart attack risk by 11 percent.

Catechins, which are a type of health-helping flavonoid found in tea, keep your ticker healthy by boosting production of nitric oxide, a compound that keeps blood vessels nice and relaxed. When you drink your tea, just be sure to do it Asian-style — minus the milk. The proteins in milk bind to tea’s catechins, making them less active, according to a study in the European Heart Journal.

Coffee: Unless you’re a woman who is either pregnant or trying to be, a couple of daily cups of Joe are perfectly safe. In fact, they may even be good for you.

Coffee has been shown to help fend off colon cancer and Parkinson’s disease. It also can slash your chances of developing type 2 diabetes. It turns out that java is a prime source of chlorogenic acid, a compound believed to slow glucose absorption during digestion.

A hint of fruit juice: In a perfect world, we’d all hydrate sans sugar. But when you just can’t live without some sweet refreshment, turn to 100 percent fruit juice, since it’s got vitamins and minerals as well as sugar (in the form of fructose, but that’s still sugar).

We YOU Docs especially like juices that are also fortified either with calcium and vitamin D or with heart-healthy omega-3s. Just keep servings on the small side — no more than 6 ounces a day — to keep the sugar hit down. (I was drinking 24 ounces a day! Jim)

Drinking liquid sugar is like extending an invitation to obesity, wrinkles, impotence, heart disease and memory loss. So for now, if the drink has calories in it, leave it in the can.

The YOU Docs — Mike Roizen and Mehmet Oz — are authors of “YOU: On a Diet.” Want more? See “The Dr. Oz Show” weekdays on KEZI. To submit questions and find ways to grow younger and healthier, go to www.RealAge.com, the docs’ online home.