Friday, March 26, 2010

Why Whole Food Supplements?

I'm baaack! Sorry about the temporary hiatus there! Things have just been crazy at the office in March since the weather broke. People have come out of hibernation...and into the office! Since it has been awhile since my last post here are some updates:
  • Our First Annual Patient Appreciation Anniversary Week was awesome! We had lots of in-office specials and goodies for everyone to enjoy. Plus we even had some wonderful patients bring in treats for us...which was crazy since we were the ones that were supposed to be appreciating them! It just confirms to us that we are in a great place with great people!
  • New office hours! We are now open Monday through Friday 9:00am-6:00pm. Most days we will take a lunch from 1pm-2pm.
  • Starting in April we will be offering Infrared Sauna Packages. We have not offered these in the past (we usually did specials each month), but I think we have really come up with a great way to save you money.

I think that is all the updating for now. Now I'll move on to the main reason for this post: Whole Food Supplements!

At our office we provide patients with Whole Food Supplements. The majority of the foods we eat now are devitalized. We eat too much refined and processed food and not enough fresh foods that are naturally high in nutrients. We need to replace the nutrition that is taken out of the foods we are eating and boost our intake of nutrients. This is why nutritional supplements are needed.

There are many different kinds of supplements on the market today and all of them have varying ingredients and benefits. It can be very confusing to determine which supplement is best for you. When selecting a supplement to take, it's important to look at the ingredients on the label. Doesn't it make sense to go back to basics and choose products that are made from whole food ingredients rather than ingesting ingredients that you can't even pronounce?

Well, it makes sense to us! That's why we offer Standard Process Whole Food Supplements. A "whole food" is any food grown and harvested in nature. Examples: beets, carrots, spinach, etc. A whole food contains all the things we need for great health-naturally occurring vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and phytonutrients.

Many of the ingredients in Standard Process supplements are grown on the company's own certified organic farm. Their unique manufacturing process captures and keeps the food's enzymes and nutritional factors intact, providing a concentrated whole food supplement full of natures nutrient complexity.

At the office we promote wise food choices and whole food supplements to provide you with the vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients, along with their synergistic cofactors that you need to sustain a healthy life!

Key to remember: You can't repair and rebuild a living body with dead chemicals!

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Happy Anniversary to us!

It's so hard to believe that our one year anniversary at this office location will be here Tuesday March 9th! I totally agree with all the people out there that say "Time Flies!".

To celebrate our Anniversary and also to celebrate all our wonderful patients who helped us to get to where we are, we are holding our First Annual Patient Appreciation Anniversary Week! We will be celebrating all week long next week March 8th-March 12th!

Come out and enjoy some homemade goodies, fruit (of course), and hot tea! We will also be raffling off our "Crazy For Spring" raffle basket at the end of the week. For each visit you have during the week, even sauna visits, your name will be entered to win the basket!

We are also offering several specials for the week:
  1. Enjoy 20% Off your total supplement order
  2. Enjoy a complimentary sauna session
  3. New patient Special: X-rays (if necessary), Exam, and Adjustment for only $50. So make sure to tell your friends and family because New Patient spaces are limited and filling up fast!
  4. For each new patient you refer in, you'll receive not 1 but 2 free visits!

We hope you come out and join us sometime during the week and take advantage of the specials we have going! Hope to see you all here!

P.S. Enjoy the awesome weather we are supposed to have this weekend! =)

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Fluoride Part 2

Fluoride Toxicity

Fluoride is a soluble salt, not a heavy metal. There are two basic types of fluoride. Calcium fluoride appears naturally in underground water sources and even seawater. Enough of it can cause skeletal or dental fluorosis, which weakens bone and dental matter. But it is not nearly as toxic, nor does it negatively affect so many other health issues as sodium fluoride, which is added to many water supplies.

Sodium Fluoride is a synthetic waste product of the nuclear, aluminum, and phosphate fertilizer industries. This fluoride has an amazing capacity to combine and increase the potency of other toxic materials. The sodium fluoride obtained from industrial waste and added to water supplies is also already contaminated with lead, aluminum, and cadmium.

It damages the liver and kidneys, weakens the immune system, possibly leading to cancer, creates symptoms that mimic fibromyalgia, and performs as a Trojan Horse to carry aluminum across the blood brain barrier. The latter is recognized as a source of the notorious "dumbing down" with lower IQ's and Alzheimer's effects of fluoride.

Another not commonly known organ victim of fluorosis is the pineal gland, located in the middle of the brain. The pineal gland can become calcified from fluorides, inhibiting it's function as a melatonin producer. Melatonin is needed for sound, deep sleep, and the lack of it also contributes to thyroid problems that affect the entire endocrine system.

Various permutations of Sodium Fluoride are also in many insecticides for homes and pesticides for crops. Sometimes it is even added to baby foods and bottled waters. If you live in a water fluoridated area, purchase commercially grown fruits, especially grapes, and vegetables that are chemically sprayed and grown areas irrigated by fluoridated water, you are getting a triple whammy! Better skip that fluoridated toothpaste!

Step 1: Getting Rid of the Source

As always, the first step in detoxifying is to curb taking in toxins. Drinking a good quality spring water is a good start to slowing down your fluoride contamination.

Avoiding sprayed, commercially grown foods while consuming organic or locally grown foods is another big step. Watch out for processed foods such as instant tea, grape juice products, and soy milk for babies. They all contain high concentrations of sodium fluoride. So do many pharmaceutical "medicines". By minimizing your sodium fluoride intake, your body can begin eliminating the fluorides in your system slowly.

Magnesium is a very important mineral that many are lacking. Besides being so important in the metabolism and synthesis of nutrients within your cells, it also inhibits the absorption of fluoride into your cells! Along with magnesium, calcium seems to help attract the fluorides away from your bones and teeth, allowing your body to eliminate those toxins. So during any detox efforts with fluoride, it is essential that you include a healthy supplemental dose of absorbable calcium/magnesium as part of the protocol.

Step 2: Speed Up the Fluoride Detox

Exercise, a healthy diet, not over eating, and stress reduction all contribute to higher melatonin production from the pineal gland.

Iodine supplementation has been clinically demonstrated to increase the urine irrigation of sodium fluoride from the body as calcium fluoride. The calcium is robbed from your body, so make sure you are taking effective calcium and magnesium supplements. Lecithin is recommended as an adjunct to using iodine for excreting fluorides.

Iodine is another nutrient lacking in most diets and causing hypothyroid symptoms of lethargy or metabolic imbalances. Eating lots of seafood for iodine has it's constantly rising mercury hazards. Seaweed foods and iodine supplements that combine iodine and potassium iodide are highly recommended over sea food by most.

Tamarind, originally indigenous to Africa but migrated into India and southeast Asia, has been used medicinally in Ayurvedic Medicine. The pulp, bark, and leaves from the tree can be converted to teas and strong tinctures, which have also shown the ability to eliminate fluorides through the urine.Cleansing the liver is also considered effective for eliminating fluorides and other toxins.

Dry Infrared Saunas combined with exercise releases sodium fluoride stored in fatty tissues. Be sure to keep the pure water intake high to protect the kidneys while using a highly absorbable calcium magnesium supplement.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Fluoride Part 1

10 Facts about Fluoride

1) 97% of western Europe has chosen fluoride-free water. This includes: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Norway, Scotland, Sweden, and Switzerland. (While some European countries add fluoride to salt, the majority do not.) Thus, rather than mandating fluoride treatment for the whole population, western Europe allows individuals the right to choose, or refuse, fluoride.

2) Fluoride is the only chemical added to drinking water for the purpose of medication (to prevent tooth decay). All other treatment chemicals are added to treat the water (to improve the water's quality and safety - which fluoride does not do). This is one of the reasons why most of Europe has rejected fluoridation. For instance:

In Germany, "The argumentation of the Federal Ministry of Health against a general permission of fluoridation of drinking water is the problematic nature of compulsion medication."

In Belgium, it is "the fundamental position of the drinking water sector that it is not its task to deliver medicinal treatment to people. This is the sole responsibility of health services."

In Luxembourg, "In our views, drinking water isn't the suitable way for medicinal treatment and that people needing an addition of fluoride can decide by their own to use the most appropriate way."

3) Contrary to previous belief, fluoride has minimal benefit when swallowed. When water fluoridation began in the 1940s and '50s, dentists believed that fluoride needed to be swallowed in order to be most effective. This belief, however, has now been discredited by an extensive body of modern research.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, fluoride's "predominant effect is posteruptive and topical". In other words, any benefits that accrue from the use of fluoride, come from the direct application of fluoride to the outside of teeth (after they have erupted into the mouth) and not from ingestion. There is no need, therefore, to expose all other tissues to fluoride by swallowing it.

4) Fluoridated water is no longer recommended for babies. In November of 2006, the American Dental Association (ADA) advised that parents should avoid giving babies fluoridated water. Other dental researchers have made similar recommendations over the past decade. Babies exposed to fluoride are at high risk of developing dental fluorosis - a permanent tooth defect caused by fluoride damaging the cells which form the teeth. Other tissues in the body may also be affected by early-life exposures to fluoride. According to a recent review published in the medical journal The Lancet, fluoride may damage the developing brain, causing learning deficits and other problems.

5)There are better ways of delivering fluoride than adding it to water. By adding fluoride to everyone's tap water, many infants and other at-risk populations will be put in harm's way. This is not only wrong, it is unnecessary. As western Europe has demonstrated, there are many equally effective and less-intrusive ways of delivering fluoride to people who actually want it. For example:
A) Topical fluoride products such as toothpaste and mouthrinses (which come with explicit instructions not to swallow) are readily available at all grocery stores and pharmacies. Thus, for those individuals who wish to use fluoride, it is very easy to find and very inexpensive to buy.
B) If there is concern that some people in the community cannot afford to purchase fluoride toothpaste (a family-size tube of toothpaste costs as little as $2 to $3), the money saved by not fluoridating the water can be spent subsidizing topical fluoride products (or non-fluoride alternatives) for those families in need.
C) The vast majority of fluoride added to water supplies is wasted, since over 99% of tap water is not actually consumed by a human being. It is used instead to wash cars, water the lawn, wash dishes, flush toilets, etc.

6) Ingestion of fluoride has little benefit, but many risks. Whereas fluoride's benefits come from topical contact with teeth, its risks to health (which involve many more tissues than the teeth) result from being swallowed. Adverse effects from fluoride ingestion have been associated with doses atttainable by people living in fluoridated areas. For example:
a) Risk to the brain. According to the National Research Council (NRC), fluoride can damage the brain. Animal studies conducted in the 1990s by EPA scientists found dementia-like effects at the same concentration (1 ppm) used to fluoridate water, while human studies have found adverse effects on IQ at levels as low as 0.9 ppm among children with nutrient deficiencies, and 1.8 ppm among children with adequate nutrient intake.
b) Risk to the thyroid gland. According to the NRC, fluoride is an “endocrine disrupter.” Most notably, the NRC has warned that doses of fluoride (0.01-0.03 mg/kg/day) achievable by drinking fluoridated water, may reduce the function of the thyroid among individuals with low-iodine intake. Reduction of thyroid activity can lead to loss of mental acuity, depression and weight gain.
c) Risk to bones. According to the NRC, fluoride can diminish bone strength and increase the risk for bone fracture. While the NRC was unable to determine what level of fluoride is safe for bones, it noted that the best available information suggests that fracture risk may be increased at levels as low 1.5 ppm, which is only slightly higher than the concentration (0.7-1.2 ppm) added to water for fluoridation.
d) Risk for bone cancer. Animal and human studies – including a recent study from a team of Harvard scientists – have found a connection between fluoride and a serious form of bone cancer (osteosarcoma) in males under the age of 20. The connection between fluoride and osteosarcoma has been described by the National Toxicology Program as "biologically plausible." Up to half of adolescents who develop osteosarcoma die within a few years of diagnosis.
e) Risk to kidney patients. People with kidney disease have a heightened susceptibility to fluoride toxicity. The heightened risk stems from an impaired ability to excrete fluoride from the body. As a result, toxic levels of fluoride can accumulate in the bones, intensify the toxicity of aluminum build-up, and cause or exacerbate a painful bone disease known as renal osteodystrophy.

7) The industrial chemicals used to fluoridate water may present unique health risks not found with naturally-occurring fluoride complexes . The chemicals - fluorosilicic acid, sodium silicofluoride, and sodium fluoride - used to fluoridate drinking water are industrial waste products from the phosphate fertilizer industry. Of these chemicals, fluorosilicic acid (FSA) is the most widely used. FSA is a corrosive acid which has been linked to higher blood lead levels in children. A recent study from the University of North Carolina found that FSA can - in combination with chlorinated compounds - leach lead from brass joints in water pipes, while a recent study from the University of Maryland suggests that the effect of fluoridation chemicals on blood lead levels may be greatest in houses built prior to 1946. Lead is a neurotoxin that can cause learning disabilities and behavioral problems in children.

8) Water fluoridation’s benefits to teeth have been exaggerated. Even proponents of water fluoridation admit that it is not as effective as it was once claimed to be. While proponents still believe in its effectiveness, a growing number of studies strongly question this assessment. According to a systematic review published by the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long Term Care, "The magnitude of [fluoridation's] effect is not large in absolute terms, is often not statistically significant and may not be of clinical significance."
a) No difference exists in tooth decay between fluoridated & unfluoridated countries. While water fluoridation is often credited with causing the reduction in tooth decay that has occurred in the US over the past 50 years, the same reductions in tooth decay have occurred in all western countries, most of which have never added fluoride to their water. The vast majority of western Europe has rejected water fluoridation. Yet, according to comprehensive data from the World Health Organization, their tooth decay rates are just as low, and, in fact, often lower than the tooth decay rates in the US.
b) Cavities do not increase when fluoridation stops. In contrast to earlier findings, five studies published since 2000 have reported no increase in tooth decay in communities which have ended fluoridation.
c) Fluoridation does not prevent oral health crises in low-income areas. While some allege that fluoridation is especially effective for low-income communities, there is very little evidence to support this claim. According to a recent systematic review from the British government, "The evidence about [fluoridation] reducing inequalities in dental health was of poor quality, contradictory and unreliable." In the United States, severe dental crises are occurring in low-income areas irrespective of whether the community has fluoride added to its water supply. In addition, several studies have confirmed that the incidence of severe tooth decay in children (“baby bottle tooth decay”) is not significantly different in fluoridated vs unfluoridated areas. Thus, despite some emotionally-based claims to the contrary, water fluoridation does not prevent the oral health problems related to poverty and lack of dental-care access.

9) Fluoridation poses added burden and risk to low-income communities. Rather than being particularly beneficial to low-income communities, fluoridation is particularly burdensome and harmful. For example:
a) Low-income families are least able to avoid fluoridated water. Due to the high costs of buying bottled water or expensive water filters, low-income households will be least able to avoid fluoride once it's added to the water. As a result, low-income families will be least capable of following ADA’s recommendation that infants should not receive fluoridated water. This may explain why some children have been found to suffer the highest rates of disfiguring dental fluorosis in the US.
b) Low-income families at greater risk of fluoride toxicity. In addition, it is now well established that individuals with inadequate nutrient intake have a significantly increased susceptibility to fluoride’s toxic effects. Since nutrient deficiencies are most common in low-income communities, and since diseases known to increase susceptibility to fluoride are most prevalent in low-income areas (e.g. end-stage renal failure), it is likely that low-income communities will be at greatest risk from suffering adverse effects associated with fluoride exposure. According to Dr. Kathleen Thiessen, a member of the National Research Council's review of fluoride toxicity: “I would expect low-income communities to be more vulnerable to at least some of the effects of drinking fluoridated water."

10) Due to other sources, many people are being over-exposed to fluoride . Unlike when water fluoridation first began, Americans are now receiving fluoride from many other sources* besides the water supply. As a result many people are now exceeding the recommended daily intake, putting them at elevated risk of suffering toxic effects. For example, many children ingest more fluoride from toothpaste alone than is considered “optimal” for a full day’s worth of ingestion. According to the Journal of Public Health Dentistry:
"Virtually all authors have noted that some children could ingest more fluoride from [toothpaste] alone than is recommended as a total daily fluoride ingestion."
Because of the increase in fluoride exposure from all sources combined, the rate of dental fluorosis (a visible indicator of over-exposure to fluoride during childhood) has increased significantly over the past 50 years. Whereas dental fluorosis used to impact less than 10% of children in the 1940s, the latest national survey found that it now affects over 30% of children.

* Sources of fluoride include: fluoride dental products, fluoride pesticides, fluorinated pharmaceuticals, processed foods made with fluoridated water, and tea.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Dark Chocolate Anyone?

Yes Please!...so go ahead and indulge this Valentine's Day!

I am sure by now many of you had heard that dark chocolate actually has some health benefits besides comforting you on a particularly bad day. But many of you may not know why. Since it is Heart Awareness Month and Valentine's Day is Sunday what better time than now to discuss the health benefits of dark chocolate!?

Good heart health depends on wide open, flexible arteries that are free of blockages and can deliver blood efficiently throughout your body. Many studies have shown that consumption of dark chocolate or cocoa may help with all those vital functions. Natural compounds in cocoa and dark chocolate may aid the cardiovascular system by improving blood flow and reducing blood pressure. Scientists have also discovered that cocoa may help maintain healthy arteries.

Recent research shows that dark chocolate and cocoa may:
  • Help your arteries relax and widen, lowering blood pressure, promoting good blood flow and reducing the strain on the heart.
  • Help prevent the build-up of plaque that can block arteries.
  • Have mild anti-blood clotting effects.

Scientists attribute the power of dark chocolate and cocoa to their surprisingly high amount of antioxidants, plant-based compounds also found in red wine and green tea. People sometimes forget that chocolate, like wine and tea, starts out as a natural product. Chocolate comes from the cacao bean (the seed of the fruit of the cacao tree) which is a particularly potent source of antioxidants. The antioxidants in chocolate are called polyphenols, a large class of compounds found in fruits and vegetables like oranges, soybeans and berries. Dark chocolate and cocoa are particularly high in a sub-class of these compounds called flavanols, which are also found in red wine and tea.

The flavanols in dark chocolate and cocoa are key to heart health because they deactivate unstable molecules in your blood called free radicals. Free radicals are basically unstable oxygen molecules that can trigger changes in the structure of normally healthy cells. This damage is thought to be an underlying cause of many chronic diseases. Free radicals can aggravate the bad cholesterol in your blood and lead to the clogged arteries. Flavanols have also been shown to stimulate the production of nitric oxide, a key gas inside artery walls that relaxes and widens arteries, allowing for the easy flow of blood and reduced blood pressure. It's the role these flavanols play in promoting heart health that has grabbed researchers' attention.

In fact, ounce for ounce, dark chocolate and cocoa have more antioxidants than do foods like blueberries, green tea, and red wine...now that's something to smile about!

I generally recommend the higher percentage of cacao. The cacao content refers to the total cacao content in the chocolate. The three cacao components are: 1. Chocolate Liquor 2. Cocoa Butter 3. Cocoa Powder. If you see a dark chocolate bar that says 60% Cacao Dark Chocolate, then you know that 60% of that bar is made up of cocoa butter and chocolate liquor and the remaining 40% is made up of sugar, vanilla, and other ingredients. So you can see why the higher percentage the better. But just know that the higher the percentage the less sweet the chocolate is...so don't expect to bite into a 72% Cacao Dark Chocolate bar and taste milk chocolate. If you only like milk chocolate right now, I recommend starting at about 50% Cacao Dark Chocolate, and then working your way up from there.

With all this said, I am not telling you to go and make your whole diet based around dark chocolate. What I am saying is that it is a good treat. So enjoy-in moderation, just like everything else in life!



Happy Valentine's Day!



Tuesday, February 9, 2010

What is the Glycemic Index You Ask?

I have had several questions regarding the Glycemic Index, what is it, why is it important, and how do I know where the food I am eating falls on this scale? Well today I am devoting this blog to just that!

Glycemic Index (GI) has become a popular term. GI refers to the rise of blood sugar after ingesting a specific food (2-3 hours after eating). The glycemic index is about foods high in carbohydrates. Foods high in fat or protein don't cause your blood glucose level to rise much. This numerical value is compared to the GI of glucose at a value of 100 (this is the base line). Lower glycemic values are recommended for people with obesity, diabetes, and insulin resistance.
An awareness of foods' Glycemic Index can help you control your blood sugar levels, and by doing so, may help you prevent heart disease, improve cholesterol levels, prevent insulin resistance and type-2 diabetes, prevent certain cancers, and achieve or maintain a healthy weight. A substantial amount of research suggests a low GI diet provides these significant health benefits.

After we eat carbohydrate-rich foods, our digestive process usually breaks them down, and eventually turns them into glucose, which can then enter our bloodstream. The presence of glucose in the bloodstream usually triggers the production of insulin, a hormone that helps glucose get into cells where it can be used for energy. Once our immediate energy needs have been met, extra glucose still remaining in the bloodstream can be stored in our muscles and liver for later use. If our muscle and liver stores of glucose are full, but we still have extra glucose floating around in our blood, then insulin can help our body store this excess sugar as fat.

Since insulin helps glucose get into cells where energy is made, insulin is vital to fueling the body. However, too much insulin secretion over long periods of time can cause problems. Research shows that prolonged exposure to elevated levels of insulin can cause:
  • high triglycerides
  • high "bad" LDL cholesterol
  • low "good" HDL cholesterol
  • high blood pressure
  • insulin resistance
  • increased appetite
  • obesity
  • risk of developing or exacerbating type 2 diabetes

Lower GI diets:

  • help people lose and manage weight
  • increase the body's sensitivity to insulin
  • improve diabetes management
  • reduce the risk of heart disease
  • improve blood cholesterol levels
  • can help you manage the symptoms of PCOS
  • reduce hunger and keep you fuller for longer
  • prolong physical endurance
A good website to check out is Home of the Glycemic Index. On this site you can type in the food you are interested in and it will produce a list that includes the Glycemic Index and the Glycemic Load. I had fun typing in a bunch of different foods and seeing where they ranked on the GI scale. Some foods might surprise you also.

Above I just mentioned Glycemic Load (GL). What's this? Well, the glycemic load is a ranking system for carbohydrate content in food portions based on their GI and the portion size. Recently researchers have placed more value on the glycemic load value of foods. The GL takes into account the amount of carbohydrates in a serving of a particular food. The glycemic index tells us how quickly a carbohydrate turns into blood sugar, but it neglects to take into account the amount of carbohydrates in a serving, which is important. The higher the glycemic load value, the greater the blood-sugar level and the resulting stress on insulin levels.

Below is a chart that shows food that are have both a low glycemic index and a low glycemic load along with medium and high glycemic index and glycemic load.

Just some food for thought!






Tuesday, February 2, 2010

American Heart Month!

Did you know that February is American Heart Month. Yup, it's true. In honor of American Heart Month I thought it would be appropriate to talk about a Mediterranean Type Diet. Personally, this is how I love to eat! It incorporates the basics of eating healthy (which most of us have been doing the last 21 days) with a couple of goodies thrown in there as well. Many studies have been conducted showing the positive effects of following a Mediterranean Type Diet vs a Traditional American Type Diet.

Below are some of the key components the Mediterranean diet includes:
  1. Eat a generous amount of fruits and vegetables
  2. Get plenty of exercise
  3. Consume healthy fats such as olive oil
  4. Eat small portions of nuts
  5. Use herbs and spices instead of salt to flavor foods
  6. Drink red wine...in moderation
  7. Consume very little red meat
  8. Eat fish or shellfish at least twice a week

For those of us who just finished the Purification Program, this should be no problem! You have been eating this way for the last 21 days minus the nuts, whole grains, and red wine. But notice you still should not go back to eating processed, refined, sugar latent foods! Keep chosing fresh veggies, fruits, healthy oils, and lean protein (chicken & fish).

If you plan on following this type of diet check out MayoClinic.com for some more information.

When I come across some more yummy recipes I will be sure to post.