The Essentials of Enzyme Nutrition Therapy
by Mark Rojek
Food enzymes in raw food are vital for digesting that food, but their
destruction during cooking is a key factor in today's rising levels
of allergies and chronic degenerative diseases.
Eating enzyme-rich raw foods and supplementing the diet with plant enzymes
is our best insurance in preventing and treating disease and promoting
health and longevity.
Although enzymes are generally associated with raw food and digestion,
they have been shown to have clinical uses in treating disease and restoring
health.
In August 1971, the US Department of Agriculture published "An
Evaluation of Research in the United States on Human Nutrition; Report
No. 2, Benefits from Nutrition Research". The US government spent
approximately $30 million analyzing the relationship diet has to disease.
According to the study:
- Major health problems are diet related;
- The real potential from improved diet is preventative;
- Benefits would be shared by all, especially by lower economic and
nonwhite population groups;
- Major benefits are long range. Early adjustments of diet could prevent
the development of undesirable long-range effects;
- There exist geographical, regional differences in diet-related problems.
It's now known that within a very short time after its release,
all copies of the report were seized by the federal government. It was
not until the campaign in 1993-94 for the Dietary Health Education and
Supplement Act that a copy was mysteriously forwarded to the grassroots
organization, Citizens for Health, to help in its fight to prevent the
Food and Drug Administration from classifying food supplements as drugs.
Within any group that seeks control and power over a population, even
health is a legitimate target. If you can manipulate the population's
health or induce disease by modifying what they consume, you can create
a pseudo healthcare system that seems to care but is busy making billions
off disease that is relatively easy to prevent or cure through diet alone.
With the multimillion-dollar backing of an industry, you can also discredit
any alternative to current, popularly accepted treatments by labeling
them "old wives' tales", "quackery" or "unscientific".
In 1988, "The Surgeon-General's Report on Nutrition and Health"
addressed the overwhelming evidence of the connection between diet and
chronic disease. In his report, then Surgeon-General C. Everett Koop wrote:
"For the two out of three adult Americans who do not smoke and do
not drink excessively, one personal choice seems to influence long-term
health prospects more than any other: what we eat. The weight of this
evidence and the magnitude of the problem at hand indicate that it is
now time to take action. In the cause of good health for all citizens,
I urge support for this Report's recommendations by every sector of
American society." (Italics added.)
As reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association (vol.
280, November 11, 1998), a nationwide survey on the use of alternative
medical therapies revealed that "estimated expenditures for alternative
medicine professional services increased 45.2% between 1990 and 1997 and
were conservatively estimated at $21.2 billion in 1997, with at least
$12.2 billion paid out of pocket". The article concluded that "alternative
medicine use and expenditures increased substantially between 1990 and
1997, attributable primarily to an increase in the proportion of the population
seeking alternative therapies, rather than increased patient visits per
patient".
Not only in America but in other countries, the populace is demonstrating
a preference to what are referred to as "alternative therapies".
People are seeking natural therapies, drawing upon cultural heritages
of healing aligned with their own philosophies and beliefs. These therapies
include acupuncture, herbal medicines (both Eastern and Western botanicals),
homeopathy, Reiki and other so-called energy treatments, and nutrition.
It has become overwhelmingly clear that diet and lifestyle influence health
and disease. Yet, within the field of nutrition, there are differing opinions
on just what constitutes a healthy diet. This is most evident with popular
books on diets which flood the market. Is the low fat/low protein, high
complex carbohydrate diet that Pritikin advocated correct? Or is the Atkins
diet with high protein/fat, low carbohydrate the one we should favor?
Should we eat according to our blood type? What about raw versus cooked
foods? Is soy good for you, or is it harmful? Do the media drive our choices
through advertising? What about the "friendly" doctor staring
from your television set, telling you how dangerous this herb or that
vitamin is?
Are nutritional supplements effective or not? The debate seems endless.
Over the last decade, sales of nutritional supplements have generated
a US$4 billion industry worldwide. Almost every month, new companies claim
to have the "magic bullet" for what ails us. Multilevel/network
marketing companies are quick to get on the bandwagon, knowing how much
profit is available thanks to members of the baby-boomer generation who
pride themselves on "looking good" and staying healthy, no matter
what the cost. The rush to discover new drugs from medicinal herbs in
Third World countries keeps pharmaceutical companies abreast of all that
is under the sky.
Pioneers in Enzyme Nutrition Therapy
Within the field of nutrition, enzymes have become the buzzword. Every
company now has its own "super-concentrated enzyme formula",
and boasts how powerful it is and how it contains 10 times the enzyme
power as the other company's product.
Yet, understanding enzymes and their role in human nutrition requires
more than just knowledge of the chemistry. We also need to be familiar
with the history and pioneers behind the development of enzyme nutrition
therapy and the rationale behind its clinical use.
Historically, there is recorded evidence of diverse cultural groups
developing foods high in concentrated enzymes. Many of these cultures
discovered the health benefits of enzyme-rich foods because of trial and
error and probably just plain luck, by leaving them out in the open for
bacteria to work on them. Among these foods are fermented dairy products,
such as yogurt, kefir and various soured-milk products; fermented vegetables,
such as European sauerkraut and Korean Kim chi from cabbage; and soy products
like miso and tempeh, which were first developed in Asia. In tropical
countries, certain fruits such as papaya and mango were found to contain
very high concentrations of enzymes, and have been used traditionally
for the topical treatment of burns and wounds.
Nonetheless, it was not until the early 1900s that Dr John Beard, a
Scottish embryologist, filtered the pancreatic liquid of freshly slaughtered
young animals for the active enzyme content. He reasoned from observation
that young animals had to have greater and more powerful concentrations
of enzymes because the energy required for growth was greater. Dr Beard
injected this concentration into veins, gluteal muscles and sometimes
directly into tumor sites of cancer patients. He observed the rapid shrinkage
of tumor masses and cancer cell growth inhibition. Some patients experienced
allergic reactions because the unpurified juice contained foreign proteins.
In spite of this, more than half of the cancers completely disappeared,
while other patients' lives greatly improved and were prolonged far
beyond what was expected.
Dr Beard's enzyme treatment caused turmoil in the allopathic medical
community in England. He was called a charlatan and received threats to
close down his practice. However, patients of other doctors requested
Dr Beard's enzyme treatment. To satisfy them, doctors ordered pancreatic
juice from local pharmacists who, in turn, ordered it from the slaughterhouses.
Doctors were sold pancreatic juice from older animals whose enzyme content
was inactive. Unfortunately, the results were not successful and patients
were very disappointed.
In all, Dr Beard treated 170 cancer patients and recounted his enzyme
therapy in his book, The Enzyme Treatment of Cancer and its Scientific
Basis, published in 1907.
Not much followed from the early part of the 20th century. Indeed, it
was not until the 1930s that clinical use of enzymes began to pique the
interest of a few physicians.
In 1930, at the First International Microbiology Conference, held in
Paris, Dr Paul Kautchakoff, a Swiss doctor, presented a paper entitled
"The Influence of Food Cooking on the Blood Formula of Man".
In it, he explained how digestive leukocytosis occurred every time cooked
food was ingested by subjects of differing age and sex. This phenomenon
was observed in patients as early as 1843 and was considered a normal
occurrence.
Digestive leukocytosis is the dramatic increase in the amount and activity
level of white blood cells (leukocytes) in the blood due to a stimulus-that
stimulus being undigested cooked food crossing the gut wall. With canned
and cooked foods, the increase was moderate. With heavily processed foods
such as packaged meats, the increase was identical to food poisoning!
The only difference was the absence of the bacterium associated with food
poisoning. Cooked foods are missing essential enzymes which prevent adequate
digestion. Dr Kautchakoff made note that there was no increase leukocyte
count/activity in subjects who ate only raw food. This is because all
raw food contains food enzymes which completely digest what we eat.
From 1932 to 1942, Dr Francis Pottenger, Jr, of Monrovia, California,
began one of the most intriguing clinical studies undertaken in the field
of nutrition. His study ran for 10 years, covering four generations of
over 900 cats. In this groundbreaking study, Dr Pottenger simply controlled
the food cats were fed. The original group was fed raw, unpasteurised
milk, cod liver oil and cooked meat scraps. The other two groups were
fed uncooked meat/pasteurized milk and cooked meat/pasteurized milk respectively.
The fourth group was fed uncooked, raw meat and raw, unpasteurised milk.
Dr Pottenger's observations should have shaken the foundations of
modern medicine. Nonetheless his work, like that of so many others, has
largely been ignored. He meticulously recorded his observations with exacting
measurements and photographs. Here is a brief summary of his discoveries.
In the group of cats fed only raw food, there were no chronic degenerative
diseases! The cats lived to grow old and were easily handled. They primarily
died of old age, living much longer than cats from the other groups.
In the first generation of the combination cooked-food groups, cats
showed symptoms of chronic degenerative disease that we are familiar with:
allergies, asthma, arthritis (both rheumatic and osteo), cancers, heart
disease, kidney, liver and thyroid disease, dental disease and osteoporosis.
The second generation manifested the same diseases, albeit even more severely.
Most kittens were stillborn or born with disease, and died within six
months in the third generation. By the fourth generation, the study ended
because the cats were infertile and could not reproduce.
In drawing his conclusions, Dr Pottenger reported the underlying nutritional
factor had to be a "heat-labile substance". Unfortunately, he
had not deduced them to be enzymes, because so little was known about
them at the time.
In the early 1930s, a "special substance" was discovered in
the blood of healthy individuals which was proficient at attacking and
destroying cancer cells. However, this substance was found only very slightly
or was missing altogether in patients suffering from cancer. Working during
those years in New York, Dr Max Wolf became one of the most celebrated
doctors of his time. He was fascinated to hear of this substance and began
investigating on his own. He convinced Dr Helen Benitez to join him from
her post in the neurosurgical department at Columbia University, and they
performed thousands of tests to determine exactly what this substance
was. They concluded it had to be enzymes.
Dr Wolf then had to isolate which of the many dozens of known enzymes
were responsible for several activities, i.e., controlling inflammation,
correcting degenerative disorders and breaking down cancer cells. After
years of testing various enzyme mixtures on animals, with no harmful reactions,
he was able to offer his enzyme therapy. It soon earned him a reputation
with many famous clients in politics and the arts. Even a few Presidents
and European leaders sought him out. He developed one of the most widely
used enzyme products available-Wobenzyme.
At the same time that Dr Pottenger was overseeing the clinical study
in California and Dr Wolf was researching in New York, Dr Edward Howell
of Chicago was questioning the use of cooked, processed food for human
consumption. He found that heating food to 118°F (47.78°C) for
more than 15 minutes destroyed all the enzymes. Obviously then, heating
foods at higher temperatures for shorter periods also destroys enzymes.
The current technology of "flash pasteurization" of milk and
juice is an example. Enzymes are the only substances capable of digesting
food. They exist in raw food in order to digest (break down) that food.
Enzyme Deficiency and Degenerative Disease
In 1940, Dr Howell posed the question, "Is chronic degenerative
disease a matter of severe enzyme deficiency?" To this end, he spent
the rest of his life researching and documenting clinical work throughout
the world, and he answered his query with a resounding "Yes!"
In the early 1940s, Dr Howell created the first manufacturing facility
for the production of plant-based enzymes. While Drs Beard and Wolf used
animal-based enzymes produced from the pancreas of animals, Dr Howell
used certain species of fungus to "grow" highly concentrated
plant-based enzymes. This is where animal- and plant-based enzymes become
markedly different in their clinical use. And this is where Dr Howell's
observations and research have made all the difference in the world of
enzyme nutrition.
Dr Howell wrote two books reporting his life's work: Food Enzymes
for Health and Longevity and Enzyme Nutrition. Some of the most important
revelations about enzymes, nutrition and physiology are contained in these
pages. He noted that all mammals have a pre-digestive stomach; he called
it a "food enzyme stomach". In humans, it is the uppermost portion
of the stomach-the fundus or cardiac portion. It is here that enzymes
found in raw food predigest what has been ingested. Enzymes secreted from
saliva and other glands will likewise predigest some of the cooked food
consumed. However, when cooked food is eaten, enzymes will be supplied
from other organs to digest the cooked food. This produces a constant
drain of enzymes from the immune system and other important organs. When
this happens over a lifetime, organs fail and are overcome with "disease".
Howell discussed organ hypertrophy, noting that any organ or gland will
grow more cells, becoming larger because the demand placed on it exceeds
its ability to function. He found that, in particular, the pancreas in
humans was 2-3 times heavier and larger in proportion to body weight as
compared to the pancreas of other mammals. He attributed this to consumption
of an excessive amount of cooked foods.
When enzymes are not present in the stomach for digestion, food passes
into the duodenum, the upper portion of the small intestine, where enzymes
secreted from the pancreas digest the food. This is the common teaching
in medical schools. But what if the pancreas was not meant to be the major
digestive enzyme organ? What if digestion was meant to take place in the
stomach, with enzyme-rich food?
Dr Howell cited studies suggesting this to be the case. Because food
is not digested in the stomach as Nature intended, the burden then falls
to the pancreas, causing it to hypertrophy. If the burden continues for
long enough periods, it may lead to pancreatitis or other more serious
ailments.
Howell referred to what he called "the law of adaptive secretion
of digestive enzymes"-that the body will secrete exactly the right
amounts and types of digestive enzymes depending upon what type of food
is ingested. Eating a piece of cheese will produce more fat-digesting
enzymes than would be produced if eating a piece of bread, which is primarily
a starch and requires a starch-digesting enzyme.
Dr Howell remarked that during the early part of the 20th century when
zoos were being developed to house captured wild animals, the death rate
was very high. It was found that animals in their natural habitat ate
everything raw. They were now being fed cooked foods and experiencing
many new diseases unknown to their counterparts in the wild. It was found
that the enzyme content of saliva from animals in the wild was either
hardly there or missing altogether. On the contrary, captured animals
fed cooked foods had very high enzyme content in their saliva. The animals
were being forced to secrete enzymes from other organs to digest the cooked
food. When their diets were changed back to mostly raw foods, the enzyme
content in their saliva was reduced and the death rate dropped significantly.
Before Dr Howell passed away in the late 1980s, Dr Howard Loomis journeyed
to Florida to spend time with him. He had been asked by Dr Howell's
original manufacturing facility to formulate a professional line of enzymes.
Dr Loomis had become frustrated with the use of nutrition in clinical
practice. There seemed to be no rhyme nor reason in administering minerals,
vitamins or herbs to those in his care. As he said: "A patient comes
in with a cold and you give him vitamin C, and within a week he's
feeling better. Another person comes in with a cold and takes nothing.
Seven days later, she's fine." Everywhere one looks, the common
discussion centers around deficiencies. "Oh, you have this or that
mineral or vitamin deficiency: take some of these."
Nutrition today is practiced much like pharmacology is. For every symptom,
there is a corresponding deficiency. The solution, then, is to take more
of a particular mineral or vitamin. It is a matching game, much like with
pharmaceutical drugs. And while it is true that in certain cases a deficiency
can relate to a symptom, it is not rock-solid evidence of a deficiency.
"I have a deficiency in relation to what-another mineral or vitamin?
Isn't it possible I have an excessive amount of something?"
Making Sense of Decades of Misdiagnoses
The progression of differing diagnoses over the last few decades is
an example of how symptoms alone can be misleading when it comes to finding
root causative factors in disease.
In the 1960s, one of the common diagnoses in Western societies was hypoglycaemia
or low blood-sugar levels. Blood sugar is composed of glucose which is
metabolized from protein by the liver. Doctors told their patients simply
to eat more protein. And while it is true that low blood sugar can be
the result of inadequate protein intake, no one ever suspected it could
be the result of an inability to digest protein completely, i.e., a protein
digestive enzyme deficiency. So even if you increase the patient's
protein intake, what good is it doing if they cannot digest it adequately?
Was it a protein deficiency or a protease deficiency which caused the
low levels of protein leading to hypoglycaemia?
In the 1970s, vitamin B12 deficiency was a popular diagnosis. Many of
the symptoms of B12 deficiency match those of hypoglycaemia. These include
fatigue, inability to concentrate, irritability, headaches, confusion,
tremors and even cold sweats. Patients were given vitamin B12 shots to
alleviate the symptoms. A major concern with vegetarianism is the high
incidence of vitamin B12 deficiency that's been documented.
One of the functions of protein in the blood is that of a "universal
carrier". Protein transports vitamins, minerals, enzymes and hormones
throughout the body. Not having enough blood protein to transport these
substances would lead a doctor to diagnose a patient with a particular
imbalance or illness. The underlying assumption in the medical world is
that patients' digestions are working fine-unless, of course, they
complain to the contrary. Nevertheless, if patients have inadequate protein
levels, even though blood tests are within reference range, they still
may not be transporting or utilizing vitamin B12.
Moving into the 1980s, most everyone had become infested with yeast/fungal
organisms and/or parasites. Normally, various microorganisms inhabit the
digestive tract and are kept in balance by "friendly" microorganisms
like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium. Many of the symptoms of this new
diagnosis were, again, very similar to hypoglycaemia and vitamin B12 deficiency.
When it comes to immune system function, protein is the most essential
nutrient. White blood cells, cellular complements and many other aspects
of this system are dependent upon protein. Enzymes themselves are composed
of protein and minerals. Additionally, Dr Howell reminds us of this "vital
force" inherent in enzymes. These microscopic entities we are dependent
upon have something of an almost mysterious nature. Various white blood
cells use enzymes literally to digest what they come up against in our
bodies. These processes are known as pinocytosis and phagocytosis. After
engulfing an offending pathogen or allergen, white blood cells secrete
enzymes that destroy and digest it. If the majority of enzymes from the
immune system are being redirected to digest food, how is it possible
to maintain healthy immune system functions?
As the 1990s progressed, patients were told they must have an environmentally
induced illness, which could include allergies and hypersensitivities.
Patients were told to avoid everything they were allergic to and take
enormous amounts of supplements. Usually this resulted in extremely limited
diets and very expensive bills. New "energy" techniques were
developed supposedly to remove blocked energy and rewire the nervous system
to allow for accepting the allergen into the body without the overt reaction.
If we look at allergies from an enzyme point of view, it becomes apparent
why so many of these techniques work only temporarily. Allergies are the
body's reaction to something entering via the blood, skin, nasal cavity
or other source. When something enters the body in a healthy person, the
immune system is called upon to investigate and clear the allergen (substance)
from the body. This happens without any notice. Because there are enough
enzymes available in a healthy person, the allergen can be cleared unobtrusively.
In someone with an allergic response to the same substance, the immune
system is called to do the same work but finds it cannot handle the request.
In a person who exhibits an allergic response, there are not enough enzymes
available for the white blood cells to break down the allergen and rid
the body of it. They then experience the typical histamine response, including
reddening of the eyes or local tissue, heat, runny nose and pain.
People with allergies of an airborne source are typically those with
a history of excessive sugar and simple carbohydrate intake. Someone with
this problem has depleted their reserves of the enzyme amylase. Amylase
is an IgG histamine blocker. Like bioflavonoids, amylase stabilizes the
mast cells and basophiles that release histamine as a reaction to the
damaged area.
Antihistamines are what these types of patients get from their doctors.
Finally, in the last five years or so, patients were tested for something
called "Syndrome X", which happens to bear a striking resemblance
to type II diabetes. Syndrome X patients exhibit excess weight, cardiovascular
issues, lightheadedness and elevated glucose levels, among other symptoms.
If this is actually another name for diabetes II, it should be apparent
how symptoms are only one aspect of proper diagnostics.
What the examples above point to are signs and symptoms of distress
in the body. Looking more deeply, one finds the same phenomenon exhibited
in Pottenger's cat study and Howell's life research: namely, that
signs and symptoms of disease are proof of chronic enzyme deficiencies!
It is like coming upon a car accident and seeing the wreckage, but not
knowing exactly how it happened. The medical profession is seeing evidence
of enzyme deficiencies but is unable to correlate them to the actual disease.
Governed by their training in schools biased towards pharmaceutical drugs,
surgery, radiation and the latest in genome biotechnology and nanotechnology,
doctors today are further away from realizing the truth of how the body
can go out of balance and end up in a diseased state.
When Dr Loomis asked Dr Howell what the symptoms were for a particular
enzyme deficiency, Howell did not have an answer. He had not linked up
the signs and symptoms of enzyme deficiencies. Dr Loomis left with many
unanswered questions and began the work that has developed into Enzyme
Nutrition Therapy. After 20 years of clinical work in the field of enzymes,
Dr Loomis is considered the foremost living authority. His trained associates
continue adding to the body of work he pioneered. Enzyme Nutrition Therapy
is a scientifically sound system of assessing enzyme deficiencies in patients.
Loomis has taken Howell's baton, carried it to the next stage and
continues to push it to a higher level.
Over time, as Dr Pottenger observed in his study of cats, the continued
use of cooked, enzyme-deficient food not only leads to enzyme deficiencies
but also to subsequent generations of subjects with disease that's
more intense with each generation. Could this explain why 40 to 50 years
ago childhood asthma and allergies were rare, but today they affect the
majority of children? What about obesity? Or infertility? The percentage
of infertile couples has risen sharply in the last several decades. And
while environmental toxins may play a part in this, are we now not seeing
the results of generations fed excessive amounts of cooked food-as Drs
Howell and Pottenger foresaw?
Without ever knowing it, Drs Howell, Pottenger and Wolf confirmed each
other's work and left a legacy upon which Dr Loomis has demonstrated
the solution to humanity's many ills-that enzymes are the key factors
in health and healing, but their destruction by heat leads to chronic
degenerative disease.
Enzymes - the Vital Labor Force
Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary (28th edition) defines
an enzyme as "a protein molecule that catalyses [increases the velocity
of a chemical reaction.] chemical reactions of other substances without
itself being destroyed or altered upon completion of the reactions".
While this may seem to be definitive, it does not clarify why an enzyme
can do what it does, nor how a protein can become an active enzyme. In
other words, if an enzyme is simply a protein molecule, why not manufacture
enzymes synthetically? The trouble begins here because, to date, no one
has successfully created an enzyme from synthetic material. Enzymes can
only be created from living, organic material. It is evident that there
is something more to enzymes than can yet be accounted for scientifically.
Dr Howell observed enzymes giving off a "luminescent glow"
when actively working. He is famous for his statement, "Life itself
could not exist without enzymes". He surmised that there is a "vital
force" inherent in all living beings, as demonstrated by enzymes.
For ages, humans have observed and deduced a "divine innate force"
common to all living things. Animation of animals and plants separates
us from the soil, dust and rocks on which we move around.
Enzymes are considered the "labor force" in living things.
They are the only substances capable of doing work. They are busy putting
things together or splitting them apart. They initiate, speed up, slow
down or stop all biochemical processes in living beings. Enzymes are very
specific in how they work on a substrate (the component upon which they
work). This has often been referred to as a "lock-and-key system".
The substrate is the lock, while enzymes are the keys that fit precisely
into the lock. They can only work on the exact substrate.
Enzymes are classified into several groups. Hydrolytic enzymes are the
most relevant in clinical nutrition, and they are of three major groups:
- Digestive enzymes-manufactured by digestive organs to assist in digesting
food;
- Food enzymes-found in all raw, uncooked food;
- Metabolic enzymes-manufactured by all cells to carry out their respective
functions.
Although there are many classes and subclasses of digestive enzymes,
there are four general enzymes considered here:
- Amylase-digests starches, including grains and starchy vegetables;
- Cellulase-breaks down plant fiber;
- Lipase-splits apart fats and oils into fatty acids;
- Protease-breaks down protein into amino acids and small-chain peptides.
Probably the most familiar of the amylases is lactase. People who are
lactose intolerant are both deficient in and lack the ability to manufacture
this enzyme.
All the above, except cellulase, are manufactured in the human body.
Cellulase must come from the plants themselves, which is why it is so
important to chew one's food thoroughly. Cellulase is trapped inside
the fiber itself and must be liberated in the chewing process-otherwise,
one experiences the gas and bloating common to those, especially the elderly,
who cannot digest raw foods. Juicing fruits and vegetables also extracts
cellulase from the fiber But the need for plant fiber in a world where
many are dependent on laxatives cannot be overstated and may outweigh
unnecessary juicing.
All raw, uncooked foods contain the exact types and amounts of enzymes
necessary for their breakdown (digestion). Fruit ripening is the consequence
of enzymes slowly breaking down the fruit's contents. If it has gone
too far before we consume it, we say it is "rotten". There are
optimal times when fruit should be harvested and consumed. But due to
"shelf life", fruit is picked unripe and left to ripen in the
warehouse or grocery store. In this case, the vitamin, mineral and enzyme
content is inadequate and not desirable from a nutritional point of view.
One study found that plants gave up their enzyme structures to return
the mineral portion of them back to the soil since it was lacking in minerals.
Enzymes are the most heat-sensitive nutrients. As mentioned earlier,
food enzymes are generally destroyed when heated at 118°F (47.78°C)
for longer than 15 minutes, and this happens whether the food is baked,
boiled, broiled, canned, fried, pasteurized, roasted, steamed or especially
microwaved. Dr Howell observed this and reasoned that enzyme-deficient
food must force the body to use up metabolic enzymes to digest food. He
compared it to a bank account. If you continually drain your resources
and never replenish your holdings, at some point you are bankrupt. In
the case of enzymes, degenerative disease occurs, with old age following
soon afterwards. We are told all the time, "Oh, your symptoms are
related to old age; better get used to it". Culturally, this seems
true because we have observed it since childhood. We even expect to grow
old with the accompanying health issues associated with old age because
we have been told so.
Granted, our progression from infancy through adolescence and adulthood
involves changes and the appearance of "aging". But what if
there were substances naturally occurring in the food and within our bodies
that were responsible for the rate at which we grew older? Dr Howell equated
that the length of life was proportional to the amount of enzymes exhausted
in digestion. In other words, one's length of life is influenced by
how much our metabolic enzymes are used to digest cooked food. Since enzymes
are shifted from their metabolic uses, especially from the immune system,
to digest cooked food, we will age faster. Could this be what Ponce de
León was looking for in his legendary "fountain of youth"?
Some researchers may have given us a clue.
In the 1980s, Dr Roy Walford of UCLA conducted numerous laboratory experiments
on animals. He reduced their food intake and found that their length of
life extended beyond what was considered normal. He suggested that all
one had to do was not eat so much in order to have a healthier and longer
life. Walford stated the obvious, but he may have missed the real point.
Dr Howell found that in fasting there is an increase in available enzymes
in the body due to the lack of food, especially cooked food. In the absence
of food, the body has more enzymes for repair and healing. As an example,
there are approximately 64 different types of enzymes circulating in the
blood to clear waste and prevent the buildup of plaque. When the body
is shortchanged of these enzymes, there will be an unnatural buildup of
plaque. Why would there be a lack of these enzymes in the blood? When
cooked food is eaten, enzymes for digesting it must be found somewhere
in the body. It is here that metabolic enzymes are shifted from their
normal functions to the role of digestion, leaving the body primed for
future disease.
Signs of Enzyme Deficiencies
Symptoms of mineral and vitamin deficiencies occur relatively quickly.
They are recognized to cause specific illness. Enzyme deficiencies, outside
of genetic or birth defects, take longer periods to be noticed and have
only begun to be recognized in some circles of the medical community.
What, then, are typical signs and symptoms of the more common enzyme deficiencies?
- If you have problems digesting carbohydrates, you may experience airborne-sourced
allergies, diarrhoea, fibromyalgia or attention deficit disorder (ADD
or ADHD).
- If you cannot digest fats, you may experience constipation, gallbladder
problems, heart disease or hormone imbalances.
- If you cannot adequately digest protein, you may experience constipation,
arthritis or other inflammatory conditions, anxiety or panic attacks,
premenstrual syndrome or immune system disorders.
- If you are unable to break down plant fiber, you may experience constipation,
eczema or other skin-related problems, recurrent yeast/fungal infestations
or excessive weight gain.
The above conditions are also the result of diets high in those foods
associated with the enzyme deficiency. In fact, the foods one craves are
those that create dietary stress due to one's inability to digest
them completely. They are also the foods one has either allergies or hypersensitivities
towards because of the failure to be able to digest them, i.e., because
of the deficiency of that particular enzyme.
People may crave certain foods because of the enzymes found within the
food, which the body needs. But being cooked and destroyed, those enzymes
do nothing for the craving-so we eat more of the same thing, telling ourselves
we should not.
Beyond a Raw Food Diet
Dr Edward Howell, the pioneer in the clinical use of plant enzymes,
began working at Dr Henry Lindlahr's nature cure sanitarium in the
1920s near Chicago, Illinois. Dr Lindlahr is considered by many to be
the "Father of Naturopathy", introducing the modality to the
public after his own diabetes was cured by Father Sebastian Kneipp, a
nature cure doctor in Bavaria. Father Kneipp used his "cold water
cure" and herbs to restore the health of his patients.
Dr Howell's research and observations led him to believe that if
he could replace the enzymes lost in cooked and processed food, the nutrients
could be better utilized. In 1932 he founded the National Enzyme Company
to produce food enzymes to help in digestion. During his clinical practice,
he witnessed hundreds of patients' cures from chronic degenerative
disease. Dr Howell advocated at least a 75% raw food diet and taking digestive
plant enzymes with the remaining cooked food. In an interview conducted
towards the end of his life, he remarked that even if someone ate a mostly
raw food diet, it still would be important to use concentrated plant enzymes.
Replenishing what he referred to as the "enzyme bank" was
a sure way to maintain one's health into old age and prevent disease.
While eating an entirely raw food diet would seem ideal, in most cases
it would not be realistic for the majority of people at this time. Even
the vegetables of the cruciferous family (broccoli, brussels sprouts,
cabbage, cauliflower and kale) should not be eaten raw. They contain thyroid-inhibiting
factors that should be destroyed by cooking. Though there is a growing
awareness of diet, nutrition and alternative medicine, the average person
leaves it to someone else to "fix" them. Thanks to the media's
flood of advertisements, they usually rely on over-the-counter drugs.
The combination of propaganda and naïveté allows the average
person not to take full responsibility for their own health. Changing
the system so that raw food was the main staple of society would demand
a complete alteration of the food and medical industry and require reeducation
on food preparations. It might even challenge belief systems in many cultures.
It would confront the largest and most powerful industry in the world:
the pharmaceutical/petroleum cartel. Monsanto would be the first to sue
anyone having anything to do with it because it would invalidate the corporation's
push for global market control of worthless genetically engineered seeds.
Only organically cultivated seeds could be used because of the greater
enzyme content inherent in the plants once they were grown. All food would
be organically grown, not only to prevent the pesticide/herbicide interference
with normal bodily enzyme functions but because mineral content in organic
food is far more abundant, minerals being necessary coenzymes. Appliance
companies selling microwave ovens would be driven out of business unless
they developed new products. All those cooking shows on cable television
would have to reinvent themselves by coming up with novel ways to prepare
raw food.
There would be an ongoing debate, as there is now, on whether to be
vegetarian, since eating raw meat would probably be seen as abhorrently
barbaric. Nonetheless, Dr Howell specifically discussed how the Eskimo
culture ate raw autolysed meat. Howell points out the original meaning
of the American Indian word "Eskimo": "he who eats it raw".
The technique of autolysis involves keeping meat in the proper conditions
of temperature and moisture for the enzyme cathepsin, found in meat tissue,
to break it down slowly. It has been practiced for centuries. Traditionally,
Eskimos survived brutal winters in the northern tundra living on raw,
predigested meats and blubber, without any fruit or vegetables or degenerative
disease! When they began eating a "regular" diet of cooked foods
high in carbohydrates, they experienced an increase in degenerative disease.
Howell explains there is no evidence that humans can live on an exclusively
raw meat diet, but he does make the point for autolysis. The hygienic
conditions of those animals raised as food supply would have to be updated
so that they lived in extremely clean environments without cages and were
free to roam. They in turn would not eat grains but would be pasture fed.
Antibiotics and other drugs would be used only in rare instances. This
would cost several billion dollars or more to change worldwide. It is
doubtful the food and pharmaceutical industry would go along with it.
Since the bottom line in any industry is profits, there would be far less
profit if farmers and the populace suddenly did not need the majority
of pharmaceuticals.
Traditions and cultural implications aside, the socioeconomic structures
of today's world make it difficult to achieve this change towards
eating raw food on a grand scale. Nonetheless, there are small groups
around the world who are practicing this way of eating. They mostly advocate
vegetarianism. Whether being a vegetarian is the most appropriate approach
to health is still debatable; it is not to be addressed here. Even vegetarians
have major health issues, sometimes far worse than non-vegetarians. What
the author is addressing is the clinical use of enzymes as therapeutic
tools for preventing and reversing disease and maintaining optimal health.
The therapeutic use of enzymes reveals significant differences between
enzymes resulting from animal sources and those of plant origin. Today,
animal-based enzymes are primarily derived from the pancreas of freshly
slaughtered pigs. They contain the highest enzyme concentrations from
animal sources that we know of to date. They have been used since the
early 1900s and have been very effective under certain conditions. Some
enzymes are obtained from plants, including bromelain from pineapple,
papain from papaya and nanokinase from soy fermentation. Other plant-based
enzymes are produced from different fungus/mold species by "growing"
them. Various enzymes can be cultured from these fungi/molds in very high
concentrations. Contrary to popular belief, these enzymes do not contain
any of the substances they were grown from; laboratories manufacturing
plant enzymes have independent laboratory assays available to verify this.
Enzyme Activation Dependent Factors
Vitamins and minerals are considered essential nutrients and the symptoms
of their deficiencies are well documented, often occurring soon after
depletion. Signs and symptoms of enzyme deficiencies take much longer
to manifest and are very often missed in clinical evaluations.
Enzymes are usually bound to either a mineral or a vitamin, which are
coenzymes. Unlike most vitamins and minerals, enzymes are unique, requiring
four specific conditions for activation in order to function:
- moisture (water);
- ideal temperature range;
- the exact pH (alkalinity or acidity);
- a specific substance (substrate) to work on.
Water: The Gift of Life
In order for enzymes to be active, moisture must be present. Enzymes
will not work in a dry environment. They must have moisture. All legumes,
nuts and seeds contain enzyme inhibitors. The inhibitors prevent those
foods from spontaneously growing, and also nullify the body's own
digestive enzymes from working on them. This is why they are so difficult
to digest and why we feel tired after eating them. It costs the body great
amounts of energy to digest them. Heating will destroy enzyme inhibitors
but will also destroy the enzymes themselves. Soaking these foods for
at least 12 hours not only destroys the inhibitors but activates the enzymes.
Once activated, enzymes will begin breaking down proteins, fats and carbohydrates
within the legume, nut or seed, giving the body predigested food.
In his book, Your Body's Many Cries For Water1, Dr Fereydoon Batmanghelidj
documents chronic dehydration as a causative factor for many health problems
such as asthma, arthritis, allergies, back pain, hypertension, migraine
headaches and other degenerative diseases. Coffee, alcohol, manufactured
beverages and many of the pharmaceutical drugs dehydrate the body. He
believes dehydration to be the root cause of many degenerative diseases.
Enzymes are the only substances capable of doing work in the body, but
they need adequate moisture in order to accomplish this.
Is it possible that dehydration for extended periods inhibits or slows
normal enzyme functions which could lead to disease? It may be an academic
point of argument. When the body is dehydrated, the blood becomes thick,
making normal bodily functioning difficult. Taking aspirin will thin the
blood, but not without side effects. Drinking more water will also thin
the blood. Supplemental enzymes will thin the blood, but large amounts
are required to accomplish this.
There are several ways to view any health crisis and there may be more
than one way to remedy it. Finding the safest, most natural and medically
sound way of supporting the body to achieve resolution of any health crisis
can be challenging for the average person. Having the media thrusting
advertisements at them and at the same time spewing propaganda about questionable
safety issues of natural remedies, it is no wonder most people are confused
and leery.
Some will say: "What about vitamin and mineral depletion in the
soil and our food as causative factors in disease? What about our polluted
environment-the pesticides, herbicides and industrial waste?" Frankly,
it should not take a rocket scientist to conclude how health-damaging
our waste and chemical toxicity have become. It is essential to eat organically
grown food, while avoiding junk food and food that has been genetically
modified, microwaved and/or irradiated. Yet if you eat cooked food, the
body will still suffer from enzyme deficiencies. When there is enough
of nature's "labor force"-namely, metabolic enzymes and
fluid circulating throughout the body-digestion, tissue repair, growth,
immune function and detoxification will proceed normally.
Dr Loomis includes a 24-hour urinalysis in his system of evaluation.
"Volume" represents how much fluid intake there is and how well
the body eliminates it. In relation to chlorides and specific gravity,
volume reveals sodium chloride (salt) intake and kidney function respectively.
Does one ingest too much salt or not enough? Does the patient drink enough
water or too much?
Many people drink too many liquids (not necessarily water) in the belief
that they are doing their bodies good by flushing out toxins. While elimination
of toxins is beneficial and to be encouraged, excessive fluid intake can
deplete and change the electrolyte balance, resulting in numerous other
health issues. Rather than guess how much water your body needs, you are
advised to follow the recommendations in Dr Batmanghelidj's book.
In addition, utilizing Dr Loomis's 24-hour urinalysis will prove to
the patient if they are drinking excessive amounts of water, too little
water or just the right amounts daily. Adjusting water intake based on
a 24-hour urinalysis is a clinically sound method of correcting electrolyte
levels and balancing acidic/alkaline conditions.
Temperature
Temperature plays a crucial role in how active enzymes are within the
environment in which they are working. Bromelain and papain are two protein-digesting
enzymes common in commercial and industrial use. Bromelain is utilized.
in the meat industry as a meat tenderizer because its ideal temperature
range is 120-160°F (48.89-71.11°C). Papain is used in the tanning
industry to soften leather. Its optimal temperature is around 105°F
(40.56°C). Bromelain and papain have had some success in clinical
use as anti-inflammatory agents. However, their limited results might
be due to the body's temperature of 98.6°F (37.0°C), which
is not ideal for them. Enzymes produced from mold/fungus organisms, however,
have an ideal temperature range of 95-105°F (35.0-40.56°C). At
the normal body temperature of 98.6°F, plant enzymes from mold/fungus
origins are perfect. This will be seen when we discuss fever in part three
of this article series.
Animal-based enzymes (pancreatin) are heat labile, as are plant enzymes.
Dr Howell noted that heating food at 118°F (47.78°C) or greater,
for any length of time, destroys all the enzymes.
Pancreatin, which has been used most extensively over the last 80 years,
is subject to the same problems faced when manufacturing enzymes in the
form of tablets or capsules. Whether the enzymes are from animal or plant
origins, when they are produced as a tablet the heat involved in the processing
causes a loss of at least 50% of the enzyme activity in those products.
Encapsulating enzymes is more advantageous because there is no heat involved
and consequently no loss of enzyme activity. There are also no binders,
fillers or excipients as in tablets; these have the potential to cause
allergic reaction in some people.
Acidity and Alkalinity
One of the other major differences in using animal and plant enzymes
is what is known as the pH factor. In chemistry, pH is a measurement of
the acidity or alkalinity of a substance. Vinegar is somewhat acidic,
while hydrochloric and sulphuric acids are highly acidic. Sulphuric acid
is contained in car batteries. Hydrochloric acid is used commercially
and is produced in the stomach. Lye, on the other hand, is extremely alkaline;
it is an ingredient in most commercial products used to unclog plumbing
drains. Interestingly, many of the newer plumbing and septic tank cleaners
use concentrated plant enzymes.
Animal-based enzymes like pancreatin are limited, as they can only work
in a pH range of 7.2-9.0, which is alkaline. Stomach acid concentrates
down to about 2.0-3.0 during digestion. This is why animal-based enzymes
can never digest food, since they are limited to the alkaline end of the
pH spectrum. One of the body's most important functions, monitored
by the hypothalamus, is that of keeping the blood pH between 7.35 and
7.45-which, as indicated above, is alkaline. The slightest deviation from
this narrow range will throw the body into crisis. Since animal-based
enzymes work only in an alkaline environment, they have been shown to
work best when taken in between meals to break down unwanted protein such
as undigested food remnants, viruses, bacteria and other pathogenic microorganisms
They are also clinically proven in reducing inflammation.
Most of the original clinical studies using enzymes were done in Europe,
particularly Germany. These were primarily performed using animal pancreatic
enzymes. A library search of literature dating back to the early 1900s
shows that most studies were written in French, Italian and German. Very
few studies were presented in English until the late 1930s, as found in
the Index Medicus. Even today, most clinical studies recorded in the medical
literature still employ animal-based enzymes (pancreatin) and are from
Europe.
Common usage for pancreatic enzymes is in the treatment of pancreatic
insufficiency diseases such as steatorrhoea (excessive amounts of undigested
fat in stools), cystic fibrosis and pancreatitis. Results are mixed, but
generally some help is obtained from pancreatin. While some of the inflammation
is reduced to a degree, digestion is very little affected due to the fact
that pancreatin does not work in the acidic pH of the stomach. Plant enzymes,
on the other hand, are known to have a much greater effect in these conditions
due to the advantage of their broad pH range. A study out of England observed
that a small amount of an acid-stable lipase from plant sources was as
effectual as a 25-times larger dose of animal pancreatin.2 One experience
of the author involved a gentleman diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, due
in part to his alcoholism. His doctors prescribed pancreatin to aid with
digestion and relieve inflammation. He was given six weeks to live. He
had not found any relief with the pancreatin. Four weeks after he started
a plant-based enzyme program, he lost touch with the author. The author
succumbed to thinking he would never see this client again, due to his
death. One year later, he ventured into a restaurant and there was the
former client with his wife and son, enjoying a meal. The author asked
in disbelief how he had survived. He explained he had continued taking
plant enzymes, having purchased some from a health food store. He was
still alive after several years, to the amazement of his doctors.
Plant-based enzymes work in a very broad pH range of about 2.0-12.0.
This covers both the acidic and alkaline ranges and makes them ideal for
digesting food. Remember, Dr Howell found a pre-digestion stomach in mammals,
including humans. Based on the observations of Beazell et al. as well
as other researchers, Howell reasoned that most digestion takes place
in the stomach. Since plant enzymes survive extreme pH conditions, this
makes them perfect for digesting protein, starches and fats in the stomach.
This digestion in the stomach also relieves the pancreas of its enzyme-producing
burden.
Plant enzymes are active in both acidic and alkaline environments, giving
them greater access to digesting substances in blood, lymph and tissue
that do not belong there.
Substrates: The Lock and Key
Lastly, enzymes need a specific substrate (substance) on which to work.
The analogy most commonly used is that of a lock-and-key system. Enzymes
are very exacting in what they can work on: if the key does not fit the
lock, nothing can occur. Protease works only on splitting protein down
into smaller protein peptides and amino acids. Lipase cleaves fats and
oils into fatty acids. Cellulase breaks down cellulose, which is plant
fiber
Pectinase works on pectin (fiber) from fruit. Fructase breaks down fructose,
the sugar found in fruit. Sucrase breaks down sucrose, the sugar obtained
from beets or sugar cane.
One of the most commonly discussed enzyme deficiencies is lactose intolerance-the
inability to digest the sugar component of milk. It has been observed
through associates of Dr Loomis that when someone is lactose intolerant,
they are also usually intolerant of other sugars including maltose from
grains and sucrose.
The enzymes necessary for digesting these sugars are produced by the
villi of the small intestine. When someone overconsumes sugar in its many
forms over time, they exhaust their body's ability to produce the
specific enzymes necessary to digest those sugars. This is also the case
with fructose when it is used as an additive derived from synthetic or
even natural means, if enzymes are not present to digest it.
People who consume too much sugar also end up not being able to digest
fats properly. This is especially true for women. The complex endocrine
system of women warrants the ability to digest fats and proteins to ensure
necessary hormone production throughout life, especially during menopause.
Hormones are primarily produced from fats, proteins and minerals. In fact,
the major steroid hormones (aldosterone, cortisol, oestradiol and testosterone)
are derived from cholesterol.
Due to excessive sugar consumption during their lifetime and the inability
to digest the sugar, so many women experience difficult menopause because
of mineral deficiencies brought about by the sugar. Difficult menopause
also stems from long-term problems of protein and fat digestion. The body
uses food not only for energy but for tissue repair (which requires protein)
and production of essential hormones.
The above example is true of any food that is consumed exclusively for
long periods. Excessive consumption and the concurrent inability to digest
those foods are known as dietary stress factors. Everyone is subject to
dietary stress factors due to the repeated overconsumption of particular
foods. The base of the food pyramid advocated by the medical community
is built upon carbohydrates. It has become clear to many that this is
a faulty representation of the ideal diet. The rapid rise in the incidence
of diabetes, obesity and cardiovascular disease, especially in children,
is the result of excessive carbohydrate and sugar intake and lack of exercise.
The new kid on the block, insulin resistance syndrome (IRS), is just another
example of the body's inability to digest and utilize sugar and simple
carbohydrates properly. It is believed by many to be the precursor of
type II diabetes. It is further evidence of enzyme deficiencies, specifically
of the sugar and carbohydrate digesting enzymes.
Another group of enzymes, antioxidant enzymes, works on what are termed
free radicals. Free radicals are the result of living in an industrial
society. Externally they are caused by radiation, pollution and toxins,
while internally they are the result of normal metabolism. They are molecules
without a paired electron in their outer ring. Electrons hold molecules
together. Normally, a stable molecule has a pair of electrons. It will
become unstable and reactive if there is an unpaired electron in the outer
ring. Very often, free radicals are composed of an unstable oxygen molecule
which will cause damage to the lipid portion of the cell membrane. It
can also affect the protein and DNA of the cell. Antioxidants, including
enzymes, can prevent or stop the damage caused by free radicals.
Glutathione peroxidase splits hydrogen peroxide into water and a single
stable oxygen atom. The main symptoms of excessive peroxide free radicals
include heart and liver disease, premature aging, and skin disease such
as age spots, cancer, dermatitis, eczema, psoriasis and wrinkling. Glutathione
peroxidase is dependent on the mineral selenium. If there is a deficiency
of selenium in the soil and thus in the food consumed, there may be a
hindrance in the body's ability to produce adequate amounts of glutathione
peroxidase. Interestingly, epidemiological research in the United States
and China shows areas with the lowest concentrations of soil selenium
have the highest cancer rates, with the converse being true. This was
first known in 19883 and later confirmed in the latter 1990s.
Superoxide dismutase (SOD) is an antioxidant enzyme responsible for
cleaving the highly reactive superoxide radical O2¯ into hydrogen
peroxide and protecting cells from dangerous levels of superoxide. Working
in tandem with SOD is the enzyme catalase. It breaks down the hydrogen
peroxide that is created by SOD's action on superoxide radicals. SOD/catalase
deficiencies have been observed in inflammatory conditions, especially
arthritis, bursitis and gout. In the field of anti-ageing medicine, it
is believed that supplemental antioxidant enzymes can slow the aging process.
By curbing free radical processes, one may stop the damage done to cell
membranes, strengthening the permeability of the cell and making it less
prone to invasion by pathogens or environmental pollutants.
Absorption of Exogenous Enzymes
One of the arguments against using supplemental enzymes is that they
are protein macromolecules and therefore are denatured or destroyed by
the action of hydrochloric acid produced inside the stomach and, as such,
they cannot cross the brush-border of the intestine intact. Another argument
is that even if they did cross over, they are nothing more than a trigger
for the production of endogenous enzymes. As described below, these and
other arguments have been proven incorrect.
A macromolecule is a compound of 1,000 or more atoms bound together.
There is overwhelming evidence that macromolecules do, in fact, cross
the gut lumen intact. In 1904, Drs Ganghofer and Langer demonstrated that
large protein molecules were absorbed across the intestinal gut without
being degraded and were still capable of functioning.4
Morris documented the intact absorption of gamma globulin in newborns.
He recounted how infants' first milk is colostrum, which sets up the
infants' digestive immune function.5 Both gamma globulin and colostrum
are proteins. Professor Seifert of the University of Kiel not only demonstrated
the absorption of gamma globulin but proved by means of immunological
testing that the proteins were intact, entering the bloodstream unaffected
and in full molecular size.6-8
Walker and others documented extensive work on the intestinal uptake
of macromolecules in relation to immunisation.9-11 Gardner specifically
wrote about the gastrointestinal assimilation of intact proteins.12, 13
Other animal and human studies have described numerous intact proteins
including animal-based and plant-based enzymes being absorbed into the
bloodstream following oral administration.14-17
In one study, cancer patients with known inflammatory conditions (deep
and superficial thrombophlebitis of the extremities) were given doses
of proteolytic enzymes either orally or intramuscularly of trypsin and
chymotrypsin. Measurements of blood levels of both enzymes showed marked
increases within 30 minutes, with a decline to base levels at the end
of 24 hours. These results occurred with both orally administered and
intramuscularly injected enzymes. Since the orally administered enzymes
did increase the blood esterase substantially, it was concluded that "orally
administered chymotrypsin and trypsin resulted in specific esterase activity
changes in blood, indicating absorption of the enzymes given, rather than
release of other enzymes from the intestinal tract".18 Unfortunately,
this study was only interested in whether or not proteolytic enzymes could
be absorbed across the gut wall. There was seemingly no interest in what
the effects might be from the enzymes themselves on the inflammation or
cancer.
In another study, lipase was found to be circulating from across the
intestinal lumen into the lymph system and back to pancreatic acinar cells,
where the cycle repeated itself.19 This circulation of enzymes via the
lymph and blood systems is similar to the recycling of bile salts by the
liver.
You Are What You Can Digest!
Over the last century, doctors have sought to treat human ailments with
a variety of natural and not-so-natural methods. Driven by the financial
gains of pharmaceutical companies, research scientists have tried to unlock
the secrets of nature to synthesize active ingredients of plants and animals.
The amount of money spent on health care in the United States per person
based on per capita income far exceeds any other country-yet there is
rampant illness, with always the promise from pharmaceutical companies
of yet another discovery just around the corner. Most people have come
to expect the "magic bullet" pill that will do everything for
them. Even in the natural health food industry, the latest vitamin/mineral
supplements have everything except the kitchen sink thrown in for good
measure.
In the early 1900s, radiation and surgery became the mainstays of treatments.
By the 1940s, pharmaceutical drugs had turned into the miracle cures.
We've moved into an entirely new and uncharted territory, becoming
cocky with the analysis of genomes and the ability to tamper with life.
Cloning of animals and production of genetically modified drugs are the
next promise for the future. We are told that irradiated and genetically
modified foods will feed the world, but at what cost?
All of the above factors will provide continuing evidence of enzyme
deficiencies leading to more obscure and unrecognizable diseases. Biological
and chemical terrorism now threatens our existence, but so does the manipulation
of our food.
Throughout history, many scientific discoveries have been blighted by
a blind spot. That spot is the gaping hole of the future of this planet,
including everyone and everything on it. In the Hindu and Buddhist religions,
karma is the principle of cause and effect. It has been described in many
ways and in many languages by prominent religious leaders as well as physicists.
Christians understand it as "What ye sow, so shall ye reap".
What we do now will forever affect the world we live on and in. Clean
food, water and air are essential for survival. We can control what we
eat, drink and breathe, so long as we are informed and educated.
The ongoing work of Dr Loomis and his associates attests to the best-kept
secret in the field of nutrition. You are not necessarily what you eat,
but what you can digest. Improved digestion through plant enzymes should
be the starting point in any health program. When the body can get what
it needs, when it needs it, it will perform wonders and even miracles.
As Dr Howell said, "Without enzymes, life itself would not be possible".
Enzymes As Therapeutic Tools In Healing
Since ancient times, enzymes have unknowingly been involved in treating
human ailments. Food consists of protein, carbohydrates, enzymes, fat
and fiber, minerals and vitamins. While the properties of enzymes have
largely been unknown until recently, results were witnessed and associations
of health or disease were made between various plant and animal substances.
The healing properties of herbs are primarily attributed to alkaloid or
other chemical properties that trigger a response in the body. Invariably,
the chemistry of herbs affects metabolic enzyme pathways. The unique substance
either inhibits an enzyme or stimulates another to change body chemistry.
Some plants have unique essential oils capable of inhibiting or destroying
pathogenic microorganisms due to the disruption of some enzymatic pathway
of the organism.
Observations of the few (medicine men, shamans and later monks) gave
them a certain power over the rest of the population who could not identify
which plants caused the healing. This was reserved only for the tribal
healer and passed on to the favorites within the tribe. The use of hallucinogenic
plants was often employed by shamans to elicit the wisdom from the spirit
world to aid in the cure of the person. In today's world of organized
medicine, control over one's health is still largely in the hands
of the elite few and knowledge is kept from the populace. Contrary to
the enlightening herbs of the shaman, a moderate number of health care
workers become addicted to or self-medicate with pharmaceutical drugs
or turn to alcohol to help relieve stress involved in their profession.1,
2, 3
Within the realm of natural medicine, old and new alike, therapies abound.
Everything from acupuncture, botanicals and nutrition to homeopathy and,
more recently, "energy medicine" is available to the average
patient. Regardless of the modality chosen, what remains to be understood
is that in every case the healing can only occur if the body has enough
metabolic enzymes to do the work. Enzymes do work. Work in this case denotes
the ability to initiate, alter, speed up or slow down biochemical processes.
It indicates having the capacity to break apart or join components together
synergistically to change their original structure and function. Food
is broken down during digestion and made into smaller components which
are then utilized. in the body for structure and function. Protein is
rendered into amino acids and smaller peptides. These can be used as neurotransmitters
for proper brain function. Certain amino acids are used for energy, mineral
transport and repair of tissue.
Nutrition, as defined by Webster's Third International Dictionary
of the English Language, is "The science of food and the processes
by which the organism ingests, digests, absorbs, transports, utilizes
and excretes food substances". All too often, this definition is
forgotten in the field of nutrition. Nutrition today is practiced in much
the same way as the pharmaceutical drug approach: for every symptom, there
must be a deficiency; simply give the mineral or vitamin and the signs
will go away. One of the most common assumptions in both allopathic and
complementary medicine is that the patient's digestive system is working
fine. Unless the patient complains of heartburn, gas, bloating, belching
or pain in the abdomen, doctors assume no problems. Divergent to this
is the approach Dr Loomis took in his research into enzymes.
Diet, Digestion and Detoxification
When Dr Loomis began his exploration into the benefits of enzymes in
restoring health, he knew the starting point had to be with diet and digestion.
The dramatic increase in obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes
in Western societies is evidence of the simple fact that people eat too
much. It also reveals signs of chronic enzyme deficiencies. The combination
of simple carbohydrates, fats and sugars found in "fast food"
are the major contributing factors to the above disease conditions. Food
is much more than just a quick fix for energy. Food is responsible for
tissue repair and growth, hormone production, eyesight and immune function.
Through protein neurotransmitters, food, or the lack of it, affects our
feelings, thoughts and behavior. In her groundbreaking book, Molecules
of Emotion, Dr Candace Pert recounts her discoveries of several biochemicals
involved with emotions.4 The body requires "raw material" from
which to produce these biochemicals. Food is the raw material in the form
of protein, fats and carbohydrates.
We must appreciate the dynamics of our body's internal environment-the
intracellular and extracellular fluid-in order to understand other complications
as the result of poor digestion. Intracellular fluid is found inside the
cell and is not constant; it changes due to the extracellular fluid-the
fluid outside the cell. Intracellular fluid represents about 66% of the
water found in the body. Extracellular fluid roughly makes up the other
33% of the body's water. It serves as a means of transport for nutrients
and waste products from normal metabolism. The extracellular fluid needs
to remain reasonably stable regarding volume (amount of water), temperature,
acid-alkali balance (pH) and levels of nutrients (protein, cholesterol,
minerals, glucose) to nourish the cells.
The body continually identifies deficiencies and excesses of specific
nutrients or metabolic waste products. All attempts are made to rectify
any imbalance by changing the chemistry. The hypothalamus is the only
part of the brain not isolated by the blood-brain barrier. This barrier
shields fragile tissues of the brain from changes in the body's extracellular
fluid. It monitors the body's chemistry 24 hours a day, seven days
a week. It reads the slightest alteration in the blood, then quickly sets
about to make the necessary changes to maintain homoeostasis (balance).
The chemistry of the blood is largely determined by what we consume. Food
and drink comprise varying combinations of proteins, fats, carbohydrates
and fibers, enzymes, vitamins and minerals. It is all about chemistry.
The hypothalamus must ascertain how to keep the body in balance despite
the type of food consumed. The sort of balance necessary for optimal health
for one person may not be the same for another. Indeed, most often they
can be radically different. As Shakespeare wrote, "One man's
meat is another's poison".
If you cannot completely digest what you eat, several things may happen.
- Firstly, the undigested food remnants pass through the brush-border
of the intestinal tract into the blood and lymphatic systems. White
blood cells are stimulated to find the offending material and finish
breaking it down. This is known as digestive leukocytosis. It is an
automatic response every time you eat cooked/processed food. It was
thought to be a "normal" reaction to eating, ever since the
early 1800s. However, it was shown to be an unnatural response in the
1930s by Dr Paul Kautchakoff.5 He proved by careful monitoring of patients'
blood that only cooked-not raw-foods caused the reaction.
- Secondly, the body may begin to consume more than is necessary. Overeating
is one way of compensating for deficiencies of nutrients. The deficiencies
are not due to the conscious restriction of a particular food. As stated
previously by Dr Howell, cooking food destroys all enzymes, thus food
will not be entirely broken down into the micronutrients necessary for
cellular utilization. It is like taking something the size of your house
down to the size of a grain of sand in order to get inside the cell
to nourish it.
Enzymes are the only material capable of splitting food into usable
nutrients. Given that undigested food cannot adequately nourish cells,
the brain will direct the person to eat more of something to make up
for what the body did not get from partial digestion. When this happens
over long periods, weight gain occurs with continued loss of metabolic
enzymes. Food cravings are another sign of incomplete digestion. What
we crave tends to be the food we do not digest very well. The hypothalamus
dictates what we eat based on the chemistry of the blood. So when we
eat a particular food and have cravings for it later, it is a sign we
did not digest it very well.
We will continue to eat more of it because there is something in that
food we need but did not get. It has been suggested we are craving the
enzymes inherent in that food before it was heated. Those enzymes we
are chronically missing normally would be found in the food we crave.
Dr Howell noted that animals fed cooked/processed food often resorted
to eating their own faeces. He found it was to replace the food enzymes
lost in the cooking process.
The enzyme amylase is a good example of the above. Amylase is one
of the major carbohydrate- digesting enzymes. It is found in the kernels
of grains and in starchy vegetables. By cooking those foods, amylase
is destroyed and our body must secrete amylase from other organs, such
as the salivary glands. Amylase is known as an IgG histamine blocker.
It stabilizes the mast cells and basophils that release histamine at
the start of inflammatory conditions. One could say amylase is the body's
own natural antihistamine. Antihistamines are prescribed for allergies,
dermatitis and other histamine-type reactions. It has been observed
clinically that people who eat excessive amounts of simple carbohydrates
most often are those with histamine-related health problems-airborne
allergen reactions, allergic reactions to insect bites and bee stings,
sinusitis and other eye-, ear- and nose-related health issues. Sinus
or frontal headaches are frequently associated with chronic amylase
deficiency.
In Western society, patients with fibromyalgia tend to have a history
of excessive intake of refined carbohydrates. Aside from the occasional
discussion, there is little distinction made in the general media between
simple and complex carbohydrates. People choose what is convenient.
The fast food industry is based on this notion of convenience. However,
when closely examined, most of what is considered convenient has detrimental
effects on our health. The excessive consumption of carbohydrates will
cause chronic depletion of amylase. This may result in the typical histamine
conditions and pain found in fibromyalgia.
It is also thought fibromyalgia is related to excessive waste in the
body. Undigested remains of disproportionate carbohydrate consumption
can accumulate in tissue, since the body cannot eliminate it properly.
This might partially explain the patient response to palpation at several
lymphatic trigger points when being diagnosed. The lymph system removes
waste from the body. Yet, this will not occur very well when too much
food is eaten, causing a virtual backing up of the "plumbing".
Using highly concentrated enzymes with patients who have histamine reactions
alleviates the response within a very short time and without the side
effects associated with conventional antihistamines.
- Thirdly, undigested food allows parasites and other pathogenic microorganisms
to live off the waste inside the body. Incomplete digestion allows bacteria
to ferment carbohydrates and putrefy protein, giving off gas. The bloating
that occurs after meals is the result of this. It is trapped gas, unable
to move through the colon. The accumulation of undigested food in the
intestinal tract leads to intestinal toxemia. It is also known as indicanuria
and is responsible for a number of health-related problems.
Eliminating Nutritional Stress
In the field of enzyme nutrition therapy, it is not just a matter of
supplementing with concentrated enzymes. It is equally important to make
the necessary dietary modifications limiting the intake of those foods
known to be dietary stress factors for each individual patient. This is
determined through a 24-hour urinalysis and Digestive Challenge Test©
as developed by Dr Loomis. It is believed that the only real disease is
stress. It is how the body reacts to stress that determines what signs
and symptoms of disease manifest in the body. Within Dr Loomis's system,
we work with the following:
- Modifying diet to reduce dietary stress factors;
- Greatly improving digestion through intake of plant-based enzymes;
- Improving bowel elimination by nutritionally supporting those organs
involved;
- Stopping or reducing inflammation;
- Improving immune function with concentrated enzymes;
- Supporting the autonomic nervous system with acidic/alkaline minerals;
- Nutritionally supporting the endocrine system for proper hormonal
production.
There is a type of domino effect involved here. By improving dietary
intake, you eliminate nutritional stress. Using plant-based enzymes with
meals, the nutrients from food will be better digested, transported and
utilized. and waste will be more easily eliminated. When food is more
completely digested, the body gets the nutrients rather than the pathogenic
organisms. Improving bowel elimination ensures a reduction in toxins being
reabsorbed through the bowels back into the blood and lymph systems. This
also prevents unwanted growth of pathogenic organisms.
Inflammation can be caused by irritation from undigested food both within
the gut and in its passage into the surrounding tissue. Leaky gut syndrome
is the current name given to this phenomenon. The one area where enzymes
show consistent results is in reducing inflammation. Well-documented studies
indicate enzymes resolve inflammation and pain in half the normal time.7,
8, 9 If chronic inflammation exists anywhere, the body develops stress
in its attempts to resolve it. Over time, this exhausts the adrenals and
our immune system, making it easier for detrimental outside influences
to affect the body adversely.
Enzymes in Cardiovascular Disease
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the Western
world. It is amazing that the dietary link still evades the medical community.
Doctors pay lip service to a "healthy diet" and exercise as
preventive measures. Dietitians have even worked out a "food pyramid"
to help us make wise eating choices. Yet, in spite of the best intentions,
the death rate continues to rise and there is no chance of its diminishing
in the near future based on the models we have. The food industry "fortifies"
food with some 11 "essential" nutrients including B vitamins,
calcium, magnesium, potassium, iron and sodium. Yet, the very substances
that would digest the food are deliberately left out, destroyed for the
sake of extended shelf life.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the transportation of food across
a continent posed serious problems. How could a company ship raw, uncooked
food without spoilage? The answer was to find a way to process the food
and ship it without rotting. In the early 1900s, salicylic acid (aspirin)
was used because it "prevented the action of enzymes (unorganized
ferments), like diastase, emulsion, and that of mustard, also gastric
digestion, fermentation by yeast, ammoniacal fermentation of urine and
the germination of seeds".10 In other words, salicylic acid was "distinctly
antagonistic to most enzymes".11
So as early as 1903, aspirin was known to affect enzymes. It was used
in this way to preserve food for extended shelf-life. As newer techniques
for extending the shelf-life were discovered, aspirin was discontinued.
Is it not puzzling, then, knowing how aspirin destroys most enzymes, that
many patients are told to take aspirin in the prevention of heart disease?
From the same reference, it is stated that salicylic acid "has a
disintegrating action on the blood corpuscles". The blood-thinning
properties of aspirin result from the fact that it destroys red blood
cells, causing fewer of them to be found in the bloodstream!
The medical explanation of cardiovascular disease fails to explain the
picture fully because it is missing the major piece of the puzzle. Medical
research is funded with billions of dollars to find the "cure".
In spite of this, triple-bypass surgery is covered by insurance while
the advice and wisdom of nutritionists is not. Prevention is not practiced
because it does not bring in the revenue that surgery, radiation and drugs
do.
Much attention is paid to markers of potential heart disease. The category
of lipoproteins is a good example. Lipo means "fat", and protein
is self-explanatory. The four principal classes are: high density (HDL),
low density (LDL), very low density (VLDL) and chylomicrons. Chylomicrons
are dietary triglycerides. VLDLs are endogenous (from within the body)
triglycerides, while LDL and HDL are both endogenous cholesteryl esters.
Lipoproteins are necessary for the transport of lipids (fats). We are
told it is healthy to have relatively high HDL levels, but should have
low cholesterol (LDL), VLDL and triglyceride levels.
The endogenous group of lipoproteins is manufactured within the body,
but the raw material is still derived from the fats and proteins we consume.
Food must be digested in order for the body to utilize it. The abnormal
accumulation of lipoproteins in the blood in a small percentage of the
population represents an autosomal dominant genetic trait. But in the
majority of people with cardiovascular issues, it is evidence of incomplete
digestion of fats and protein-accompanied by the fact that people simply
overeat. How can the body properly eliminate unused fats and protein when
there simply is too much being taken in? The body must hide or store this
unusable waste. Some of it is stored in tissue and some of it circulates.
When the kidneys and colon cannot eliminate enough waste, the skin compensates.
The skin is the largest eliminative organ. Skin eruptions are the attempts
to rid the body of waste.
Unfortunately, what circulates begins to adhere to the walls of the
blood vessels, clogging them up. Macrophages are summoned to remove this
accumulation, but cannot do so without an adequate supply of enzymes.
Enzymes produced by the macrophages for their immune function are believed
to be shifted to digesting the cooked food. Obviously, this prevents the
breakdown of lipoproteins which continue to build up. Foam cells associated
with atherosclerosis are formed when overaccumulation of fats occurs in
macrophages.12, 13, 14, 15
Why has no one asked how this accumulation occurs? What is the bigger
picture? It is this author's opinion that the accumulation transpires
because cooked foods are not completely digested in the stomach. These
undigested remnants cross the intestinal border into the blood and lymph,
circulating throughout. Over time, their accumulation leads to damaged
arterial tissue. Macrophages cannot break down the lipoproteins due to
the exhaustion of their own enzymes. Eating cooked fats demands enzymes
digesting them. Cooked foods must be broken down, even at the expense
of the cardiovascular system. This daily assault of cooked foods drains
lipase from many sources, especially the immune and lymph systems.
Plant enzymes taken before meals completely digest food. Therefore,
no remnants can cross over into the blood. Having prevented further accumulation
of undigested food, one can focus on removing the accumulated material.
Enzymes taken in between meals are taken up by the body and sent to work
in areas that need them the most. Enzymes will digest the undesirable
lipoproteins in the blood vessels without affecting the vessels themselves.
Reversal of cardiovascular disease is a matter of improving digestion
and modifying dietary stress factors-in this case, fats and proteins.16,
17, 18, 19
Enzymes and Immune Function
When metabolic enzymes have been constantly drained from other organs
and systems (particularly the immune system) to digest cooked food, there
will be little left during an immune crisis, as in fever. Regrettably,
sometimes the temperature from a fever rises too rapidly, causing great
distress, such as seizures in children. If there is the risk of febrile
seizure in a child, suppressing the fever with drugs such as ibuprofen
or acetaminophen initially may be the wise thing to do; but these drugs
are known to suppress immune function. Thus, preventing a febrile seizure
first and then enhancing immune function through natural means would ensure
a speedier recovery. Consulting a physician is advisable in this case.
Someone not prone to febrile seizure may be carefully monitored to allow
a fever to take its course but should be given plenty of fluids. Supplemental
proteolytic (protein-digesting) enzymes enhance immune function, helping
to destroy pathogens. These may help put an end to a fever more rapidly,
significantly boosting immune function by destroying the offending pathogen.
Drinking sufficient water helps keep in check the "fire" induced
by a fever. It also provides necessary moisture for enzymes produced by
immune cells to defend the body. During a fever, extreme hot or cold weather
conditions and strenuous exercise, enzymes are used up at a much faster
rate. Becoming dehydrated due to decreased water consumption over time
and the use of dehydrating agents such as caffeine and alcohol may make
it more difficult for the body to resolve many of the health crises. It
is believed that using supplemental enzymes during a fever augments available
enzymes from white blood cells to destroy foreign microorganisms rapidly.
Taking exogenous enzymes during a fever can dramatically improve immune
function, resolving a fever more quickly.
A fever's typical temperature range of 99-105°F [37.22-40.56°C]
is at the high end of plant enzymes' optimal temperature range. Throughout
a fever, enzymes in blood and tissue increase as defense mechanisms and
for the removal of waste. Moreover, they are used up at a much faster
rate. A fever is the body's way of destroying pathogenic microorganisms
through heat and increased enzyme activity.
Phagocytosis is a process where macrophages surround and engulf pathogens.
They secrete enzymes which digest the invading pathogen. Referring to
digestive leukocytosis, when cooked food remnants cross the brush border
of the intestine into the blood, leukocytes are activated to find and
finish digesting those food components in the blood. When this occurs
repeatedly over time and from one generation to the next, the results
are compromised immune systems. This is due to the loss of enzymes from
white blood cells, which sacrifice them for digesting the food we eat.
Note that Dr Pottenger's cats study showed an increase in disease
from one generation to the next, and that cancer rates have continued
to soar despite the "War on Cancer". After researching library
archives on the clinical use of enzymes as far back as the early 1900s,
specifically the work of Dr John Beard and later that of Dr Howell, this
author cannot help but ask the following questions:
What if one of the pancreas's chief roles is that of an "immune"
gland as well as a digestive one? What if Dr Beard's observations
of the pancreas-producing enzymes destroying precancerous cells (trophoplasts)
are correct? One study investigated the stimulation of "digestive
enzymes" of the pancreas of rabbits after exposure to histamine.20
Histamine is one of the major components of the inflammatory response
in mammals. Is it possible that the term "digestive enzymes"
in this case is incorrect?
Are enzymes produced by such a reaction necessarily digestive, or are
they responding to resolve the inflammation? Enzymes are known to speed
the process of inflammation, thereby resolving it more rapidly.21, 22,
23, 24, 25 If the pancreas responds to histamine by producing enzymes,
could they be for healing the damaged tissue and stabilizing the mast
cells and basophils that released the histamine in the first place?
Proteases (proteolytic enzymes) are known to mediate the defense mechanisms
of the body and maintain homoeostasis. It is theorized that proteolytic
and other enzymes work in two ways as part of the body's immune system.
Firstly, orally ingested enzymes are believed to be marked by the body
as "self" and, like the character in the video game "Packman",
are capable of digesting foreign proteins in the body that are "not-self".
This would include foreign protein in the form of undigested food remnants,
bacteria, viruses and other microorganisms Secondly, exogenous enzymes
taken away from food are thought to be absorbed across the intestinal
lumen and transferred into the blood, where white blood cells uptake them
to be used in a variety of activities.
Numerous studies have been conducted in enzyme research that point to
the benefits of exogenous enzyme therapy in many immune system-related
diseases. Allergies, cancers, so-called autoimmune diseases, HIV and other
viral diseases, bacterial infections and fungus/yeast infestations have
all been shown to be helped by enzyme therapy.26, 27, 28, 29
In the event of allergies, enzymes break down the allergen/antibody
complex, splitting it away from surrounding tissue when involved. Enzymes
then break down the allergen into smaller components capable of being
eliminated without stressing the body. Airborne allergens typically contain
both protein and polysaccharide (complex sugar) structures. After entering
the bloodstream, they normally are cleaved by enzymes secreted from white
blood cells. In an allergic reaction, however, there may not be enough
enzymes available from white blood cells to do the work, leaving the mast
cells and basophils to release histamine. There occurs the typical allergic
reaction of runny nose, swollen itchy eyes, pain, heat and redness in
the area of reaction. In a study from Germany, enzymes were shown to split
circulating immune complexes as measured in decreased values in blood
and improvement of clinical symptoms.30
Several attempts have been made in using protease enzymes for patients
with coeliac disease, but with little success. It had been thought that
the gliadin protein structure of many grains such as wheat, rye, barley
and oats was to blame for the violent reactions suffered by patients.
In a study on coeliac disease, the carbohydrate portion was removed with
carbohydrases, resulting in total success. There was no damage to the
intestinal mucosa as there usually is in this disease.31 Furthermore,
the protein portion was not altered. This shows once again the specificity
of substrate which enzymes display.
One of the exciting factors resulting from enzyme therapy comes from
a study out of Austria.32 It was shown that pancreatic enzymes as well
as the constituents bromelain and papain stimulated the production of
tumor necrosis factor. Tumor necrosis factor is a cytokine (a non-antibody
protein which act as an intercellular mediator in an immune response)
capable of haemorrhagic necrosis (destruction) of tumors and can exert
cytostatic and cytotoxic activity on transformed cell lines. In other
words, enzymes not only digest foreign objects but they can activate other
protein products of the immune system to destroy undesirable growths in
the body. Although the above references represent only a small number
of studies, it can be seen that enzymes have a therapeutic role for many
disorders. Other studies include treating autism, sports injury, herpes
infection, cancer and autoimmune disease.33, 34, 35, 36, 37
Supplemental Enzymes for Health and Longevity
While changing over to a raw food diet (or nearly an all raw food diet)
is desirable, this requires discipline. Each one of us should take the
leap into the world of raw food and experiment to find out what works
for us. One can find safe, natural animal products to be used for protein
intake. The best proponent of this is Aajonus Vanderplanitz. His website,
http://www.primaldiet.com,
details his experiences over a lifetime of experimenting with raw foods,
especially raw animal products. There are numerous other raw food advocates
located on the Internet and they have written several books, primarily
dealing with a vegetarian raw food diet. Each has their arguments and
points of view. In the end, it is the reader who must decide after experiencing
what they believe to be in their own best interest.
Whether to be a vegetarian or not is finally decided through trial and
error and education. How you feel physically, spiritually and emotionally
should be noted during any transition. The impact on one's health
using enzymes can only be experienced to be appreciated. We are born with
enzyme deficiencies, and we have a limited potential for producing enzymes.
Dr Howell believed supplemental enzymes are important not only for health
and longevity but as a type of insurance. As we grow older, our bodies
do not produce as many enzymes as when we were children or young adults.
What better way to ensure our health into old age than to eat enzyme-rich
foods and supplement with enzymes where needed?
Clinical studies are generally funded by the pharmaceutical companies
for the profits of shareholders, and tend not to be conducted for purely
altruistic reasons. Furthermore, there is little interest in natural products
because they cannot be synthesized and patented-at least not in the USA.
We are living in quite a crazy world where anyone can buy and implement
various biological and chemical threats. Anthrax and smallpox are only
the tip of the iceberg of the dangers we face.
As has been written in previous issues of this magazine, there are forces
interested in creating chaos-only to hand us a solution, but at a very
great trade-off. I believe that enzymes offer mankind the greatest hope
of preventing and treating the threats we may face in the coming years.
I also encourage you to take up this call to educate yourself in all available
material from reliable sources to keep your family and loved ones safe
and healthy.
About the Author:
Mark Rojek began researching alternative therapies in 1970. His studies
included botanicals, mineral and vitamin requirements and diet. He interned
in acupuncture with Dr Bell in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, in 1973, and
graduated in 1978 with a Bachelor of Science. He studied aromatherapy,
kinesiology, massage therapy and classical homeopathy in England. In 1986,
Mark began formal studies in traditional Chinese medicine, especially
acupuncture. In Chicago, he worked with several holistic physicians as
a medical technician and maintained a private nutritional practice. Also
in 1986, he met Dr Howard Loomis, foremost living expert in enzyme nutrition,
and continues to work with him. He works with several doctors in Michigan
who refer to him and seek his counsel. He continues to research, lecture
and counsel clients in nutrition and diet. Mark can be contacted by telephone/fax
on +1 (734) 433 9267, by email,
and via his website at http://www.radianthealth.cc.
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Grote Publishing, Madison, WI, 1999
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3. Jackson, M.L., "Selenium: geochemical distribution and associations
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6. Seifert, J. et al., "Quantitative analysis about the absorption
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7. Seifert, J., Ganser, R., Brendel, W., "Absorption of proteolytic
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8. Seifert, J., Siebrecht, P. et al., "Amylase absorption and transport
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9. Walker, W.A., Isselbacher, K.J., Bloch, K.J., "Intestinal uptake
of macromolecules: effect of oral immunization", Science 177:608-610
(1972)
10. Walker, W.A., Isselbacher, K.J., Bloch, K.J., "Intestinal uptake
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11. Walker, W.A., Wu, M., Isselbacher, K.J. et al., "Intestinal
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Medicine, Touchstone, 1999, Simon & Shuster, New York, 1997
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WI, USA
26. Loomis, H.F., Jr, Enzymes: The Key to Health - Volume 1: The Fundamentals,
21st Century Nutrition, Madison, WI, USA, 1999
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injuries", The Practitioner 198:547-48 (1967 Apr)
28. Buck, J.E., Phillips, N., "Trial of Chymoral in professional
footballers", Brit. J. Clin. Prac. 24(9):375-77 (1970 Sep)
29. Boyne, P.S., Medhurst, H., "Oral anti-inflammatory enzyme therapy
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(1967)
30. Loomis, ibid.
31. Loomis, ibid.
32. Nakamura, R., Ohta, T., Ikeda, Y., Matsuda, I., "LDL inhibits
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lipoproteins. A putative mechanism for foam cell formation", Arterioscler.
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40. Liebow, C., Franklin, E. Jr, "Histamine stimulation of digestive
enzyme secretion by in vitro rabbit pancreas", Digest. Dis. and Sci.
27(3):234-241 (1982 Mar)
41. Tarayre, J.P., Lauressergues. H., "Advantages of a combination
of proteolytic enzymes, flavonoids and ascorbic acid in comparison with
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Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 10, Number 6 (October-November
2003)
PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia. editor@nexusmagazine.com
Telephone: +61 (0)7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 (0)7 5442 9381
www.nexusmagazine.com
Author: Mark Rojek
785 N. Dancer Road, Dexter, MI 48130, USA, Telephone/fax: +1 (734) 433
9267
Email: mrojek1@earthlink.net
Website: http://www.radianthealth.cc
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