Showing posts with label Omega-3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Omega-3. Show all posts

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Nutrition - Supplements - Balance; My thoughts

This morning, a former patient of mine forwarded to me some thoughts on a friend of hers that is a lacto-vegetarian. The friend had been taking Omega-3 flax oil and supplementing her diet with flax seed to get extra Omega 3. She had always had splits at the end of her nails and was interested in my thoughts on why-when she stopped taking the supplemental omega-3 did the nail splits go away. She attributed it to her fats being "out of balance" and her getting too much Omega 3 compared to the other fats in her diet...

I though the question brought up a very interesting topic, that of "nutritional balance".

Here are my thoughts...

Vitamin A and D deficiency, poor circulation, thyroid problems, hydrochloric acid deficiency, iron deficiency, calcium deficiency, protein deficiency have all been associated with split nail ends. However the broader point is that if you eat healthy and can get all you nutrients from nature, then you don't need supplementation at all. I think that's the point she's trying to make.

But most people; and I mean 99% of people - don't eat properly, nor do the plants or animals they eat. With meat animals raised in concentrated animal farming operations (CAFO), fruits, veggies, nuts and seeds grown with pesticides, fungicides, herbicides and more, our foods aren't really our foods. Additionally, most people take supplements for the wrong reasons. Most people will look at the obvious symptoms, not the whole body or the whole life style or know how to properly evaluate the whole problem.

When a doctor does a consultation, she or he starts with the symptoms then probes further. Any given symptoms can have many common conditions that cause that symptoms. So we probe and probe with our questions and when we examine, we examine all related systems.

If our seeds, nuts, fruit and veggies grew in a natural (organic) environment and our meats ate their natural evolutionary diet and our water was pure, we'd all be better off.

I take Omega-3 fish oils simply in an attempt to bring the other fats into balance. You don't need extra Omega-3, you just need your fats in balance. Once you supplement something in an attempt to bring it into balance, once you achieve that balance, you stop. Otherwise the pendulum swings the other way and you're out of balance again.

The average intake of Omega-3 by our caveman ancestors 50,000-1 million years ago is estimated at about 3500-4000mg per day. And it was all dietary, not supplemental. Because they ate all organic/natural plants and meats and drank pure unpolluted water, all fats were in balance and all vitamins, minerals, enzymes and all the little nutrients we have yet to understand were all in balance with how they existed in nature and how our bodies adapted and developed the physiologic systems to metabolize them. Everything was in perfect balance. Back then, we as a species died at childbirth, or of infections or were killed by some of the foods we were hunting. Which is why the average age of a caveman was about 35. But when caveman did survive the odds life threw at us back then, they lived to a very ripe old age like that of today or even older - however the difference was they were vibrant and healthy, not decrepit like most "seasoned citizens" are today.

Once the agricultural age started and we stopped being nomadic (we traveled with our foods hunting and gathering seasonally)...but once we stopped being nomadic and started staying in one place and growing our foods, grains became a larger and larger part of our diets as did dairy. Then there was that sanitation thing too. Disease due to sanitation issues as well as adapting to grains started becoming a regular issue. Most people that write on the subject will tell you that this is when things like tooth decay, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancers started becoming prevalent. We started eating the same foods again and again and lost the variety in our diet of differing meats, fruits, veggies, nuts and seeds and lost the variety of nutrients they all provided. We started eating more and more grains which were devoid of a lot of the nutrients our bodies had adapted to over the previous millennia. Our bodies never had the opportunity to develop physiologic systems to process them and we then forced out bodies to do so.

Previously, grains were very inefficient foods for our nomadic life. They are small, couldn't be eaten raw and it took a lot of effort compared to picking berries or hunting to extract the energy from the foods needed to support life. Nowadays with big farm equipment it's easy to gather grains, process grains and cook grains. But think about life back when our genes were developing....It rarely happened. Researchers say only in times of desperation. Nowadays, most of us are eating a diet filled with desperation foods rather than the foods optimal for our health.

Our caveman ancestors physique was more comparable to the average modern day Olympic athlete than the "average Joe" citizen of the world today. If we continue to eat desperation food, we will certainly need to supplement our diets to give us just some of the nutrients our body needs. But if you adopt an ancestral diet containing the foods from which our genes developed, you'll need nothing more.

Yes, fats need to be in balance. As long as they are naturally occurring in our ancestral food sources are necessary for us (even saturated fat). What we don't need (and what is toxic to our bodies) are the man-made hydrogenated, partially hydrogenated and their new iteration: interesterified fats.

As Hippocrates said, "Let Food By Thy Medicine And Medicine Be Thy Food". Even he understood this as he himself lived much earlier in the agricultural age.

I wonder what Hippocrates would say today in the age of industrialized, processed, artificial, pasteurized, homogenized, "pesticized", genetically altered and engineered (and coming soon to a dinner table near you) -cloned foods???

I leave you with this one thought...As benign as water seems to all of us, drink to much and you get something called Hyponatremia - or water intoxication which can and does lead to death. Yes, even water needs to be in balance.

We need to be in balance with the food from which our bodies evolved.

Those are my thoughts on supplementation, healthful eating and balance.

'nuff said

Dr. Narson

Dr. Narson is a 2-term past president of the Florida Chiropractic Association’s Council on Sports Injuries, Physical Fitness & Rehabilitation and was honored as the recipient of the coveted Chiropractic Sports Physician of the Year Award in 1999-2000. He practices in Miami Beach, Florida at the Miami Beach Family & Sports Chiropractic Center; A Facility for Natural Sports Medicine.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Aspirin, Ibuprofen & Acetaminophen Inhibit Muscle Growth

Do you ever have some aches and pains when you work out? Maybe you have some generalized aches and pain and you want to go to the gym so you pop a couple ibuprofen or aspirin or acetaminophen then head off to your work out.

The problem is, if you want your muscles to grow, these seemingly simple over the counter drugs (they're called NSAID or Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs) will inhibit a natural cascade of reactions that will halt the growth of your muscles following a workout.

There is research that conclusively shows that taking NSAIDs after exercise-induced muscle damage significantly reduces levels of the prostaglandin PGF2-α, which is intimately involved in the protein synthesis that occurs post-exercise; we work out, tear down our muscles, and the anabolic process of tissue repair and hypertrophy is dependent on levels of this prostaglandin. The NSAIDS interfere with this and thus you've pretty much wasted your time in the gym if your goal was to get bigger, better, stronger, faster muscles.

For more on this specific action of these simple NSAID that you can pick up at the local convenience store, read this for all the gory details and the references for the above statements. For my fellow sports medicine physicians and therapists, it's a well referenced article that you can easily incorporate into your presentations.

The other side of this is that national statistics show that Between 3,200 - 16,500 people die every year from bleeding ulcers as a result of NSAIDS. Here's another real scary fact: With NSAIDs taken in the previous week you DOUBLE your chance of Congestive Heart Failure. Here's a quote from the article:

Use of NSAIDs (other than low-dose aspirin) in the previous week was associated with a doubling of the odds of a hospital admission with CHF (adjusted odds ratio, 2.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-3.3). Use of NSAIDs by patients with a history of heart disease was associated with an odds ratio of 10.5 (95% confidence interval, 2.5-44.9) for first admission with heart failure, compared with 1.6 (95% confidence interval, 0.7-3.7) in those without such a history. The odds of a first admission to a hospital with CHF was positively related to the dose of NSAID consumed in the previous week, and was increased to a greater extent with long half-life than with short half-life drugs. Assuming these relationships are causal, NSAIDs were responsible for approximately 19% of hospital admissions with CHF


Here's another interesting fact: Eating veggies, fruit and clean lean natural meats (staying away from Cow dairy) promotes your body's natural processes to reduce inflammation. Taking Fish oils also promotes your body's natural anti-inflammatory pathways. Chiropractic adjustments restore proper joint function reducing nociception (pain or other aberrant nervous system input from abnormal function) and restoring mechanoreception (normal sensation from normal function).

So, the choice is yours, eat a healthy diet, take Omega-3 fish oils and go to your chiropractor to help relieve your aches and pains, or take the chances I pointed out above.


'nuff said

Dr. T

References:

  1. http://www.pinnaclefitness-online.com/Fitness-research/research_current.htm
  2. http://www.healthsentinel.com/joomla/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2668:more-hospitalized-from-nsaid-bleeding-than-all-american-war-casualties&catid=5:original&Itemid=24
  3. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10737277


Dr. Narson is a 2-term past president of the Florida Chiropractic Association’s Council on Sports Injuries, Physical Fitness & Rehabilitation and was honored as the recipient of the coveted Chiropractic Sports Physician of the Year Award in 1999-2000. He practices in Miami Beach, Florida at the Miami Beach Family & Sports Chiropractic Center; A Facility for Natural Sports Medicine.


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Monday, July 28, 2008

Is What You’re Eating Killing Your Performance?

The more I read about athletic performance and work with athletes and Type-A personality business men and women, the more I realize good nutrition is vital - and quite hard to get in this country. The more I read about good nutrition, the more I realize your health depends on the health of the food you eat. (as a side note, the more I read and learn about nutrition, the more I confirm that being a vegetarian is wrong too. But, that's for another blog post)

So, you’re out there training hard and recovering as best you can so you can go back out and train real hard again. It’s a constant cycle and it’s always about making gains. Each time you go out there you want to exceed what you did the time before. But what if the food you’re eating is killing your performance?

I’ve been doing a lot of reading lately and questioning what I (think I) know is healthy and have been quite intrigued by the answers I’ve come up with. The most common answer has to the question of “is what I’m eating healthy” has been yes and no, it depends.

For example.

Is Salmon healthy? Yes and No. It Depends.

Here’s why.

If you’re talking about Wild salmon, the answers is yes, it’s definitely healthy. It has spent it’s life living in its natural environment, eating its natural diet which give you all the nutritional benefits you’ve come to expect when you sit down to eat salmon.

But, it you’re talking about farm raised salmon the answer is no.

Why? Because the farm raised salmon is in a confined environment (which means it lives in a high stress environment without being able to exercise as it swims thousands of miles throughout its life. The Salmon lives in a chemically toxic water (would you want to dine where you and your room mates urinate or defecate?). The farmed salmon is fed a grain diet, much different than the natural diet of a wild salmon.

Why is everyone Wild about salmon anyway? Simply put.... It's The Omega-3 Fish Oils.

Salmon are naturally carnivores. They eat mackerel, sardines, herring, krill, shrimp and other fish. When they eat their natural diet, they are chock full of those very healthful Omega-3s. As Jonny Bowden, PhD puts it in his exceptional dissertation The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth, wild salmon is the “Best Source of Omega-3s on the Planet”

Omega-3 oils are natural anti-inflammatory Cox-2 inhibitors.

Now you should also know that Wild Salmon also contains Omega-6s. A very low dose dosage when compared to Omega-3s. Hence, there is a natural balance of the anti-inflammatory Omega-3s to the pro-inflammatory Omega-6s. Suffice it to say there are much more Omega-3s in Wild Salmon than Omega-6s, which means, it’s good for you.

BUT…That’s NOT true in farm raised salmon.

Not only is it not true, it’s the opposite.

There are much more Omega-6s in farmed salmon than omega 3s. So, not only is farm raised salmon not good for you, it’s actually unhealthy for you.

Sorry sushi lovers, most of your salmon is farmed. Not wild. You have to ask the sushi chef or restaurant owner to know for sure.

So, if you’re trying to perform your best, recover from your last workout or prevent your next heart attack and stroke, farm raised salmon isn’t helping even a “wee” bit. It’s probably actually hurting you.

I stopped eating beef 12 1/2 years ago because of the Mad Cow scare going on. And, it wasn't from Oprah's show of that year, it was a news magazine story that I saw and it just didn't sit well with me. Too much of my food was coming from people simply trying to make a buck and not caring how they made it. Cow farmers grinding up dead diseased cows and mixing them back into their vegetarian feed just didn't make sense to me. Forget the fact they were diseased, a cow is a vegetarian, this just wasn't right.

Turns out I was right. Not only do most of our beef cattle today not eat their natural food (grass), they are fed a diet of genetically modified corn (which is 100% of the corn on the commercial market today including the stuff YOU eat), but it's mixed with soy and other stuff (stuff being animal by products) as well. Some people are proud to proclaim that their cattle is natural 100% corn fed. To that I say, so freaking what! Corn isn't a cow's natural diet, grass is and the meat produced by it is crapola. They should be grazing in a field getting fat over the course of 4-5 years. Instead, they feed them corn and they get fat in 16-18 months. So, with some rare logical thinking, I hit the nail on the head with my reasoning.

Do you want to eat beef? There really are some wonderful health benefits to 100% Natural Grass Fed Grazing Beef. Did you know this kind of beef actually has some beneficial Omega-3s??? When you cook the beef, some of the saturated fat turns into CLA, conjugated linoleic acid, another healthy fat that has been shown to get rid of your belly... BUT THOSE HEATLHFUL BENEFITS AREN'T IN the mass produced cows that you find represented at your favorite steak house or in your local grocery store. So, buyer beware (If you want to know more about how your food goes from the farm/field to your plate, read The Omnivore's Dilemma, by Michael Pollan). Although to find it, you'll have to go to a Whole Foods or find a 100% Natural Organic cattle farm (which you can find on the internet). Remember, 100% is the key. Not just organic, not just natural. (You can thank your government for screwing up the terms natural and organic to where you have to now look for "100%")

Remember the phrase: “You Are What You Eat” ??? You’ve probably heard it growing up and a few times since… But, I’m gonna change that phrase for you (you can thank me later) because it’s not nearly complete. It should be: You are What THEY Eat.

Because what your food eats, drinks and absorbs, makes a HUGE difference in your health. Here’s the question you need to ask……Is your food eating it’s natural diet?

Not is it eating “A” natural diet….is your food eating “IT’S” natural diet.

If you remember nothing else about nutrition or health, remember that. Your health, your athletic performance depends on the health of the food that your food eats. Over millions of years, we’ve evolved as part of a food chain. Luckily we’re on the top of that chain (except for the occasional surfer or SCUBA diver). So logic tells you when you mess with the food chain and try to circumvent it, you mess with your health.

If you continue to eat a diet that’s not native for the species you're eating, not only will your performance suffer, but eventually, disease will follow.

Bottom Line: Your health depends on the food that your food eats.

‘nuff said

DocT
Oh....One more thought....
Have you ever traveled to another country, ate the food of the land and then discovered that when you returned you felt great and lost weight.... Ponder that for a while and ask yourself why.
That happened to me when I traveled to Colombia for 2 1/2 week in July 2006.

______________________________________________________

Dr. Narson is a 2-term past president of the Florida Chiropractic Association’s Council on Sports Injuries, Physical Fitness & Rehabilitation and was honored as the recipient of the coveted Chiropractic Sports Physician of the Year Award in 1999-2000. He practices in Miami Beach, Florida at the Miami Beach Family & Sports Chiropractic Center; A Facility for Natural Sports Medicine.