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OSTEOPOROSIS by Dr Jerry-Lee Hoover

May 04, 2012 By: Kathy Cotterrell Category: Articles

What is osteoporosis? How do we get it? Can we prevent it through natural means?

Are there natural ways to treat and reverse it? Do we need to fear it? Is more calcium the answer?

Our bodies are made up of a number of elements. The two most prevalent minerals in bones are calcium and phosphorus. When calcium is lost from the bones over a period of time, the bones become porous and brittle and can easily break. This is osteoporosis, a loss of weight and density in the bone cells, and the development of a spongy rather than solid texture of the bones.

The disease actually consists of two aspects, the loss of bone material resulting in an enlargement of the spaces in bones. With less material, the appearance of the bones becomes porous. What looked solid like rock now appears as a sponge.

 

IS MORE CALCIUM THE SOLUTION?

Very often we have been told that increasing the intake of high-calcium sources, such as dairy products, will both prevent and reverse osteoporosis. Is this true?

Two investigators, doing independent research, suggested at the meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research in 1986 that dietary calcium bears no relationship to the development of osteoporosis(1).

Michael Parfitt, osteoporosis researcher at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, Michigan, observes that the 1984 National Institutes of Health (NIH) panel report, recommending the use of calcium to prevent osteoporosis, is based on weak evidence(2).

B. Lawrence Riggs, Mayo Clinic researcher, reported a study of 107 Rochester, Minnesota women, 23 to 88 years old. Dr Riggs followed them for 4.3 years, with repeated measurement of their bone density. Calcium consumption in the study group ranged from 269 to 2000 milligrams daily, but the researchers could demonstrate no relationship between bone loss and calcium intake, even on the lowest calcium intake(3).

Dr C. Christiansen from Gosstrup Hospital in Denmark reported a two-year study in which 43 women were placed on calcium supplements, placebos, or estrogen. Calcium was ineffective in preventing bone loss(4).

Dr Mazees states that in population studies adjusted for body size and ethnic origin, individuals with high calcium intakes did not have denser bones than those on low calcium intakes(5).

Dr Richard Mazeses of the University of Wisconsin calls calcium "the laetril of osteoporosis11, and points out that there are no studies evaluating the safety or efficacy of calcium supplements. It is known that high calcium intakes can interfere with vitamin D utilization (also necessary for bone cell formation), and may cause kidney stones (6) .

Approximately 20 million people in the United States are affected by osteoporosis.

Most of them do not understand why they are suffering with this disease. Many of these people are taking calcium supplements, and believe that this should relieve their problems. Calcium supplement sales were estimated to have reached 166 million dollars in 1986(7).

Tragically, most of these people should not be using this extra calcium, for excess calcium in the body has several adverse side effects. It has been shown that excessive calcium is picked up by the blood and deposited in the soft tissues, the blood vessels, skin, eyes, joints, and internal organs. Little wonder we suffer.

In the blood vessels, calcium combines with fats and cholesterol to cause hardening of the arteries. In the skin, excessive calcium causes wrinkling. In the joints it crystallizes and forms very painful arthritic deposits. In the eyes, it solidifies into cataracts.

And in the kidneys, it forms hard deposits known as kidney stones. Thus it becomes evident that taking extra calcium does much harm, rather than benefit to the body.

 

WHAT ARE THE CAUSES OF OSTEOPOROSIS?

The major cause of osteoporosis is eating too much protein, especially in combination with fat, such as is found in meat and animal products. Most Americans, as they enjoy their steaks and hamburgers, are eating far too much protein At present, the World Health Organization suggests a minimum daily protein requirement of about 40 grams. The RDA recommendation is about 55 grams a day. But the average American is getting over 100 grams a day.

What happens to all this excess protein? First it is broken down into amino acids, some of which are metabolized in the liver and excreted through the kidneys as urea.

Along with the urea and amino acids excreted into the urine go large amounts of minerals.

One of the minerals lost is calcium; and studies show that the more protein you use, the more calcium you lose.

The many studies performed during the past fifty-five years consistently show that if we want to create a positive calcium balance that will keep our bones solid, then the most important dietary change that we can make is to decrease the amount of protein we eat each day.

Some other causes of osteoporosis are smoking, drinking alcohol, coffee, soft drinks, eating too much salt, taking antacid, insufficient exercise, and lack of sunshine.

Smoking is an exceedingly acid-producing habit; and one of the major roles of calcium in the body is to maintain a proper acid-alkaline balance. When one smokes, the calcium is actually drained from the bones and teeth to meet this need. Alcohol impairs calcium absorption by affecting the liver's ability to activate vitamin D, which is important in the metabolism of calcium.

Caffeine, which is found in coffee, tea, soft drinks, hot chocolate, and many over-the-counter drugs, causes more calcium to be excreted from the body than is normal.

The more salt (in particular, the more sodium) you take in, the more calcium you excrete.

Some antacids contain aluminium, which causes an increase in calcium excretion. It has been clearly shown that exercise increases bone mass, while lack of exercise causes bone loss. Since Vitamin D plays an important role in bone metabolism and the best source of vitamin D is sunshine, it stands to reason that a lack of sunshine can lead to osteoporosis.

When the problem of osteoporosis is studied world-wide, one is struck with the fact that the highest incidence of osteoporosis is in countries where dairy products and calcium supplements are consumed in the greatest quantities. The incidence of osteoporosis is lowest in the countries where the least amount of dairy products are consumed, such as the African countries. A number of studies have been done among the Bantu women of Africa. They consume less than half the protein of Americans, and have a life-style demanding large amounts of calcium (nursing up to ten children in a lifetime), yet osteoporosis is almost unknown among them.

 

NATURAL SOLUTIONS

Let us cut down on the amount of protein we eat each day, and eat foods high in natural calcium. For good health we must eat our food in as natural a state as possible without taking man-made supplements.

 

NOTE: F4L Ministries do not necessarily agree with all that is said in these articles, and am placing them so that our readers can have a greater insight in what is going on in the health care arena!

SUGAR AND HONEY by Dr Jerry Lee Hoover

April 28, 2012 By: Kathy Cotterrell Category: Articles

In 1882, the average American ate 2 teaspoons of sugar per day. In 1870, it was 11 teaspoons per day. In 1980, we consumed 35 teaspoons of sugar per day; and now the average is over 42 teaspoons per day. (See chart on Sugar Content of some popular foods).

 

WHAT IS SUGAR?

Sugar is a carbohydrate that occurs naturally in various forms in all living things. In its natural form, sugar, as found in the sugar cane or sugar beet, is combined with a large amount of fibre, and also contains iron, potassium, calcium, B vitamins, etc.. These nutrients are needed to digest the sugar that is in the sugar beet or sugar cane, However, white sugar, as we get it today, has been robbed of almost 100% of these nutrients. White sugar is so pure and refined that it basically has nothing in it but 'empty calories'.

 

Concentrated, pure sugar is a drug, unrelated to anything that occurs naturally, and is very harmful to your body. According to John Yudlin, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Nutririon at London University, "If only a small fraction of what is known about the effects of sugar was revealed in relation to any other food additive, that material would be promptly banned".

 

Sugar throws off the calcium-phosphorous balance, and disrupts the entire important phase of your body machinery. Because refined sugar has been robbed of the B vitamins that are necessary for its assimilation by the body, it latches on to these wherever it finds them – namely, in your digestive tract, so that the person who eats refined sugar is bound to be short on the B vitamins. Result? Nervousness, skin troubles, digestive trouble, and a host of other disorders which lead to much more serious problems later on.

 

The more sugar you eat, the lower your body's resistance to disease becomes. To have good health we must have a strong immune system. Sugar lowers our body's immune system, making it weak instead of strong. In our body we have white blood cells, which are called warrior cells. These attack and destroy bacteria. However, when we eat refined sugar, it causes our white blood cells to become sluggish, causing them to lose their ability to destroy as many bacteria.

 

In a healthy body, where no refined sugar is eaten, one white blood cell can destroy 14 bacteria. If a person then eats 12 teaspoons of sugar (a 12 oz. bottle of Cola has 10 teaspoons), one of their white blood cells will only be able to destroy 5.5 bacteria. If a person eats 24 teaspoons of sugar (a banana split has 25 teaspoons of sugar), one of their white blood cells will only be able to destroy 1 bacteria. This weakening effect on the white blood cell usually lasts for approximately 5 hours. To keep our body's immune system strong, we must leave sugar alone.

 

Refined sugar drains out the mineral salts of the blood, bones, and tissues. It causes hyperactivity and dental caries. It causes obesity, diabetes, low blood sugar, high blood pressure, duodenal ulcers, fatty livers, coronary and vascular disease, gout, dermatitis, and cancer. According to the American Journal of Hypertension (3:560-562, 1990), sucrose (sugar) intake may increase the blood pressure. Other studies have indicated that the intake of refined carbohydrates produces an increase in the blood pressure.

 

SOME HIDDEN SOURCES OF SUGAR

Food Portion                   Size                     TSP Sugar

Cola Drinks                      1 2 oz. bottle              10

White Bread                    1 slice                          2

Angel Food Cake            4 oz piece                    7

Chocolate Cake, iced      4 oz piece                  10

Fig Newtons                    1                                  5

Oatmeal Cookie                                               2

Glazed Doughnut                                             6

Chocolate Milk Bar          1½ oz Hershey           

Chewing Gum                 1 stick                          ½

Hard Candy                     1 oz (5 pieces)             5

Canned Peaches             2 halves & 1 T syrup   

Ice Cream Sundae                                           7

Banana Split                                                  25

Strawberry Jam              1 T                               4

Salad Dressing               1 T                               1

Apple Pie                       1 average slice            7

Apple Cobbler                ½ cup                          3

Rice Pudding                 ½ cup                          5

Chocolate Icing              1 oz                            

 

(Taken from American Foundation for Medical-Dental Science, Los Angeles, California)

 

WHAT ABOUT HONEY?

Honey is not a disaccharide like sugar; it is a monosaccharide which does not over-stimulate the pancreas. Sugar, which comes from beets or cane, is sucrose, a disaccharide, which over-stimulates the pancreas. Sugar also must undergo digestion, a process that changes it into simple sugar; whereas, honey is pre-digested and takes a load of work off the stomach and pancreas.

 

Honey is refined by the bees, whereas sugar is refined by man under less than ideal conditions, for man is not as careful or as diligent as the honey bee. Bees have to collect nectar from nearly two million flower blossoms to produce just one pound of honey. Bees are faithful and diligent in their work of making honey. Of course, pure organic raw honey is better than what you buy at the local grocery store. Raw honey will in a short time crystallize because it has not been heated to a high temperature and had all the enzymes destroyed. Honey also has more vitamins and minerals than sugar. (See chart for comparison)

 

                                        1 Cup Honey                            1 Cup SUGAR

Calories                                1,030                                           770

Protein                                 1 gram                                        0 grams

Carbohydrate                       279                                              199

Calcium                               3 mg                                            17 mg

Phosphorous                        20 mg                                          trace

Iron                                      1.7 mg                                         1 mg

Potassium                            173 mg                                        7 mg

Thiamin (B-1)                       17 mg                                          5 mg

Riboflavin (B-2)                    .02 mg                                         0 mg

Niacin (B)                             1.0 mg                                         0 mg

Ascorbic Acid                       3 mg                                           0 mg

 

America has become addicted to sugar. The average per person consumption in the US. is almost 135 pounds a year! Americans may be thought of as meat and potato eaters, but the average per person consumption of red meat is only 111 pounds per year, and of potatoes only 123 pounds per year.

 

Increasingly more Americans, however, are becoming aware of the danger in sugar consumption; and for some time now, the public has been exploring sweet alternatives.

 

How safe are these artificial sweeteners? We are all familiar with the fact that some of these artificial sweeteners have been associated with cancer. I will merely give current information on one of these sweeteners.

 

SWEETENER LINKED TO CONFUSION AND MEMORY LOSS

Aspartame, the artificial sweetener widely used in diet soda and food, may cause confusion and memory loss in some people. This finding came from a study of 551 people who had severe reactions to aspartame, which is marketed under the brand name of NutraSweet. HJ. Roberts, director of the Palm Beach Institute for Medical Research in Florida, found that 157 of the participants had major problems. Eleven lost vision in one or both eyes; one-third suffered from severe dizziness; half reported severe headaches. One 18 year-old male, who drank about two quarts of aspartame-sweetened diet soda daily, could not find his way home in his own neighborhood. Severe reactions to the sweetener occurred three times more often in women. Although the Food and Drug Administration has received hundreds of complaints about aspartame from consumers, no adequate studies have been conducted. (New Scientist, 2/18/88).

 

WHAT CAN WE USE THEN INSTEAD OF SUGAR?

Use natural sugar just as the Good Lord put it in the food, such as fresh peaches, strawberries, cherries, watermelon, etc. A more concentrated natural sugar would be found in dates, figs, raisins, dried fruits, honey, etc. 

NOTE: F4L Ministries do not necessarily agree with all that is said in these articles, and am placing them so that our readers can have a greater insight in what is going on in the health care arena!