PSTEC

by Nick Soloway

PSTEC

I just discovered PSTEC about a month ago…It is a powerful technique that can really help you neutralize strong emotional states.

 

It’s Free, Fast, & Powerful. Go here to download the free stuff….

http://www.pstecaudiosource.org/pstec/?aff_id=434

 

Self help with PSTEC™ is free and everything is here on this website. Therapists can try it for free too.

 

In a “nutshell”, the basic PSTEC™ is a unique 11 minute audio track which can be played to anyone (including yourself) to create a resolution for almost any problem related to unwanted emotions or feelings. Whilst that may sound unlikely, PSTEC™ has been described as being possibly the fastest and most efficient neutralizer of problem emotions ever created. Better than that, it’s free to help yourself and you can use it for almost anything.

Tapping

by Nick Soloway

Tapping


Contrary to what you might think, overcoming your emotional and physical challenges doesn’t have to be difficult…

Tapping has been shown to provide relief from chronic pain, emotional problems, disorders, addictions, phobias, post traumatic stress disorder, and physical diseases as helping people clear the limiting beliefs that are holding them back from attracting what they want.  20 amazing presentations during the world summit itself, an online virtual event, which starts on February 21st, covering topics such as:

  • Tapping into Abundance: Understanding What’s Really Going on with The Law of Attraction
  • Using Meridian Tapping to Quickly Manage and Eliminate Pain fro Trauma, Injury, and Surgery
  • Freedom From Food! Releasing Your Cravings and Compulsive Eating Habits to Lose Weight and Feel Great
  • Breaking the Chain of Addictions with Meridian Tapping-
  • Meridian Tapping for Cancer Support
  • Skyrocket Your Business by Overcoming the Most Common Business Fears        

(includes both basic information for beginners and advanced never before revealed strategies for people who already know about tapping)


Go here to register for this free offering.

There is Instant Access to 5 bonus interviews on Tapping with Jack Canfield, Joe Vitale, Bruce Lipton, Carol Look and Nick Ortner on how to quickly and easily implement this technique in to your life.

http://www.tappingworldsummit.com/

Smarter Calmer Kids

by Nick Soloway

2 Secrets to Calmer, Smarter Kids

By Kerry Bone

I’m the first to admit that there’s not a lot of research on herbal treatments for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). But I also believe that anything that can help keep children from a lifetime of personality-squelching drugs is well worth considering. And there are two herbs that look promising. Even though the clinical trials are still in the early stages, they’re options that every parent—and grandparent—needs to know about.

Natural cure-all tackles ADHD

The first came as a surprise to me—though maybe it shouldn’t have, considering its ever-expanding list of benefits. I’m talking about Pycnogenol, which is a proprietary, standardized extract of French maritime pine park (Pinus pinaster).

When news of it first emerged, its primary claim to fame was treating chronic venous insufficiency. From there, research showed that it could also alleviate asthma, eliminate migraines, reduce blood pressure, and lower blood sugar levels. And now studies also point to its ability to help naturally calm children with ADHD.

A pilot study found that Pycnogenol significantly improved ADHD symptoms in children taking it.1 This early evidence led to a double-blind, placebo-controlled study in 61 children, using the same dose (1 mg/kg/day) over the course of four weeks.2 The children were examined at start of trial, one month after starting treatment, and one month after the end of treatment period. Results showed that just one month of the pine bark extract caused a significant reduction of hyperactivity and improved the attention, coordination, and concentration of children with ADHD. No positive effects were found in the placebo group. A relapse of symptoms was noted one month after the children stopped taking the treatment, which shows that while Pycnogenol can help control the condition, it’s not a cure.

Researchers aren’t quite sure why it works, but the initial evidence indicates that it does. The same is true for the next herb showing potential for ADHD—Bacopa.


Better behavior—and a bonus

There are two particular controlled trials I want to share with you. The first involved an Ayurvedic herbal formulation called Mentat, which contains Bacopa (Bacopa monniera) as the main ingredient. This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial looked at the effects of Mentat vs. a placebo in 60 children with ADHD. The researchers assessed the children’s academic functioning and gave them psychological tests before and after the treatment. They found that the Mentat group showed significant improvement in both areas as compared to the placebo group.3

The other study examined the effects of Bacopa by itself. This double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study involved a total of 36 children. Nineteen received 100 mg/day of Bacopa extract for 12 weeks and 17 were given placebo. The herbal treatment was followed by a 4-week placebo period, making the total length of the trial 16 weeks in both groups. The research team evaluated the children using a battery of tests before, during, and at the end of the study. While the behavior results weren’t as clear, there were other striking improvements, including significant improvement on sentence repetition, logical memory, and learning after just 12 weeks in the children taking Bacopa. And this improvement was maintained for the whole 16-week study period—even after the children had been switched to the placebo. During the clinical trial Bacopa exhibited excellent tolerability and no treatment-related adverse effects were reported.4

Other studies support these learning-enhancement effects. For example, a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial found that 300 mg/day of Bacopa extract (about 6 g of dried herb) for 12 weeks significantly improved learning and memory consolidation.5 With those results in mind, Bacopa may be worthwhile even if your children or grandchildren don’t suffer from ADHD. KB

Skin Cancer Cure

by Nick Soloway

The sun is at its strongest this time of year, and many worry about getting skin cancer.

 

Below are two articles about an topical extract from the nightshade family ( which includes eggplant, tomato, potato,”bell” peppers and tobacco), that can cure skin cancers without surgery.

 

From Nutrition and Healing http://www.wrightnewsletter.com

 

The Researchers find a groundbreaking skin cancer cure By Jonathan V. Wright, M.D.

 

Would you believe that studies have shown that an extract from eggplant can cure —that’s cure, not just improve—the majority of skin cancers, usually in two to three months or less? This may seem like groundbreaking information, but researchers have known about it for nearly 20 years.

 

Actually, extracts from plants of the Solanaceae family ( which includes eggplant, tomato, potato,”bell” peppers and tobacco), were reported effective for treating cancer as long ago as 1825.1 But scientific investigation of these anti-cancer effects didn’t happen until the second half of the 20th century, and the first few years of the 21st.

 

Results in no-time flat

 

The first reported study compared the effects of a topical eggplant extract called BEC with a placebo on two different types of skin cancer—basal cell and squamous cell—and actinic keratosis, a condition characterized by small, rough, yellow or brownish patches of skin that almost always occur on sun-exposed skin of individuals over 50.2

Thirty individuals had basal cell cancers, usually a form that spreads locally if untreated. All 28 of the patients using BEC had complete regression of all of their basal cell cancers (some had more than one) in three to 13 weeks. None of the patients using placebo had improvement after 14 weeks.

 

Twenty of the volunteers had squamous cell cancers, a form which starts and spreads locally but can metastasize. Again, all of the patients using BEC (20 this time) had complete regression of their squamous cell cancers in three to 11 weeks. There were no placebo treatments in this group.

 

The actinic keratosis group experienced the same effects: Of the 24 in the BEC-treated group, 100 percent had complete regression, this time in just one week to a month. None of the 12 patients using placebo had any improvement at all in 14 weeks.

In another small study, which used a slightly different version of BEC called BEC2, 13 individuals with 24 basal cancers had 83 percent of those cancers comletely regress in less than two months. Five people with squamous cell cancers also had 83 percent of their cancers completely regress within one to three months. And eight individuals with actinic keratoses had 100 percent regression in just two to six weeks.

 

Cost-effective and non-invasive

 

In a letter dated April 23, 2002, Drs. Rino Cerio and Sangeeta Punjabi of the Dermatology Department of the Royal London Hospital describe their experience participating in trials using a form of the extract called BEC5 to treat both invasive and non-invasive forms of basal cell carcinoma. The first was a placebo-controlled, double-blind, multi-centered study of 94 patients. The second trial with 41 individuals was done only at Royal London Hospital, and was mostly to assess safety, so no placebo was used. The doctors reported that in both trials, approximately 78 percent experienced complete regression within eight weeks.

 

The doctors noted that with twice daily use, only a few patients reported skin irritation and redness. They pointed out that the cosmetic outcome is “comparable to that resulting from surgical excision.”

 

The doctors concluded: “In our view and experience BEC5 is a topical preparation which is safe and effective, ideal therapy for outpatient treatment… It is a cost-effective treatment for both primary and secondary skin cancer care.”

 

And follow-up research on patients who have used BEC shows that once their cancer or actinic keratosis goes away, it doesn’t recur.

 

The “backdoor approach” to cancer treatment

 

BEC5 is a name for a mixture of 1/3 solasonine and 1/3 solamargine in the “triglycoside” form, and 1/3 “diglycosides and monoglycosides” of these two basic molecules.

Solasonine and solamargine themselves are actually very similar (but not identical to) human cholesterol and steroid molecules.

 

By themselves, solasonine and solamargine don’t have anti-cancer activity because they can’t penetrate into cells, cancerous or normal. That’s why just eating the foods that contain these compounds won’t eliminate your skin cancer or even reduce your risk of getting it. In order for them to be effective, they need to be able to get into the cells. That’s where the glycosides come in.

 

Glycoside is a term used to describe molecules with various simple sugars attached to them. One of these simple sugars, called rhamnose, selectively latches on to receptors present only in skin cancer cell membranes and in actinic keratosis. When you combine the solasonine and solamargine with rhamnose, they can get into the cells where they cause cancer cell death by destroying cell components called lysosomes.

Normal cells escape any harm, since the BEC5 can’t get into them.

 

80,000 success stories

 

According to Dr. Bill Cham, who has developed BEC since the 1980s, BEC5 is effective at extremely low-doses and is safe to use even very frequently.

 

Dr. Cham writes: “BEC5 is applied at least twice daily to the skin and may be applied much more frequently if rapid regression of the tumor is required. Some patients apply [it] up to 10 times daily. The cosmetic results after using BEC5 are very impressive and over 80,000 patients have now used BEC5 successfully.”

 

Also, please note that BEC5 does not contain the part of the eggplant that can cause “nightshade sensitivity” in arthritis sufferers.

 

You can get BEC5 on-line from International Anti-aging Systems – http://www.antiaging-systems.com/scripts/iasrefer.cgi?SOURCE=WAY1&DESTINATION=bec5curaderm

 

Remember: What’s reported here are preliminary research results concerning BEC5 and squamous cell cancer, basal cell cancer, and actinic keratosis. Even though these results are very good, they may not apply to you.

 

As always, consult with a physician skilled and knowledgeable in nutritional and natural medicine if you’d like to try BEC5. And since skin cancer (especially squamous cell cancer) can be very dangerous if neglected, it’s always wisest to consult a dermatologist, too.

 

Citations available upon request and on the Nutrition & Healing website: www.wrightnewsletter.com

 

 

An Editorial From the Townsend Letter http://www.townsendletter.com/

 

Non-melanoma skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in the United States, with more than one million new cases diagnosed each year. Approximately 75% of non-melanoma skin cancers are basal cell carcinomas (BCC), and 25% are squamous cell carcinomas (SCC). The main risk factors for these cancers are excessive sun exposure (particularly a history of frequent sunburns) and the use of tanning beds. While non-melanoma skin cancers are usually not life-threatening, both types can extend to and damage adjacent tissue, and SCC can metastasize. Solar keratoses (also called actinic keratoses) are common precancerous lesions that progress in some cases to SCC.

 

The main treatment modalities for non-melanoma skin cancers are surgery and application of liquid nitrogen (cryotherapy). Radiation therapy is used in some cases, and chemotherapy may be administered in cases of metastatic SCC. Treatments for solar keratoses include topical application of 5-fluorouracil, liquid nitrogen, and electrocautery. While these treatments are usually effective in early cases, they can be costly ($600-$2,500), and the cosmetic result is not always optimal.

 

Solasodine glycosides, which are found in plants of the nightshade family, have also been shown to be effective as a topical treatment for non-melanoma skin cancers and solar keratoses. These compounds have been reported to kill cancer cells selectively, without harming normal cells. A cream containing a mixture of solasodine glycosides has been licensed in Australia since 1991 and is marketed under the name Curaderm. This product contains 0.005% solasodine glycosides, 10% salicylic acid, 5% urea, and 0.1% tea tree oil in a cream base. In an uncontrolled clinical trial, Curaderm treatment was successful in 100% of cases of BCC, SCC, and solar keratosis.

 

Eighty-six patients (aged 38-74 years) with a total of 138 histologically confirmed skin lesions (39 BCC, 29 SCC, and 56 keratoses), all of which were at least 5 mm in diameter, applied Curaderm to the lesions twice a day, after which the area was covered with a plastic dressing. Treatment was continued until clinical regression was seen (one to 13 weeks). In patients with BCC, the lesions rapidly became swollen, and erythema developed in the surrounding tissue. The lesions ulcerated after about two days, and this process continued until all cancerous cells were destroyed and healthy tissue grew in. SCC lesions also showed rapid regression, and solar keratoses responded similarly. All of the 138 lesions completely regressed (this was confirmed histologically) after mean treatment periods of 5.2 weeks for BCC, 5.6 weeks for SCC, and 2.9 weeks for solar keratoses.

 

The cosmetic result was generally good – in many cases, better than what might have been expected with surgery or liquid nitrogen. Curaderm treatment caused itching and burning around the lesions in most cases, but no other adverse effects occurred, and standard laboratory tests (hematology, chemistry, and urinalysis) remained normal. No recurrences were seen during follow-up periods of one to three years.1

 

These findings were confirmed recently in a double-blind trial that included patients with BCC. The product used in that study was Zycure, which is similar to Curaderm but is not commercially available. It contains 0.005% solasodine glycosides, 10% salicylic acid, 5% urea, and 5% propylene glycol. Ninety-four patients (mean age, 69 years) with histologically confirmed BCC were randomly assigned in a 2:1 ratio to receive, in double-blind fashion, Zycure cream (n = 62) or placebo (the vehicle without the solasodine glycosides; n=32). The cream was applied twice a day under an occlusive dressing for eight weeks. At the end of the treatment period, biopsies revealed complete resolution of the lesions in 66% of the patients in the active-treatment group and in 25% of those in the placebo group (p < 0.001). The positive responses in the placebo group were attributed to the presence of keratolytic agents in the vehicle (i.e., salicylic acid, urea, and propylene glycol). Ninety percent of the patients in the Zycure group who were successfully treated returned for follow-up at six months and one year. Of those who returned, 85% were free of recurrences after six months and 78% were free of recurrences after one year. Of the eight patients whose lesions resolved during placebo treatment, 63% were free of recurrences after six months and 50% were free of recurrences after one year. No serious adverse effects were reported.2

 

Proponents of the use of solasodine glycosides have suggested that the results in the study described above might have been even better if the treatment had been continued for an additional four weeks (i.e., a total of 12 weeks). That possibility is supported by the results of the earlier uncontrolled trial, in which the maximal response was not seen until week 13 in some cases.

 

The available evidence suggests that products containing solasodine glycosides are an effective alternative to conventional treatments for the most common malignant and precancerous skin lesions. Curaderm is available for purchase online at a cost of $120 for a 20-ml bottle. A typical course of treatment requires an average of three bottles. Instructions and precautions regarding the use of this product are available at
http://www.antiaging-systems.com/scripts/iasrefer.cgi?SOURCE=WAY1&DESTINATION=bec5curaderm
Because of the potentially serious nature of skin cancer, the treatment should be monitored by a physician.

Reduce Colon Cancer Risk

by Nick Soloway

Folate reduces Colon Cancer risk in women

News of any little way to lower our cancer risk is always welcome.

 

News of how to lower it by two-thirds? Well, that’s VERY welcome.

 

It turns out a certain vitamin—one long-time e-Tips readers already know can prevent damage caused by heart attacks and boost brain power.

 

Men, this vitamin is good for you, too, but you’re definitely going to want to forward this to the women in your life.

 

Because a group of researchers at South Korea’s National Cancer Center have found that eating a diet rich in folate can lower a woman’s risk of colon cancer by a whopping two- thirds. The same effect wasn’t seen in men.

 

The reason for folate’s cancer-protective power? Well, it’s one of the nutrients that’s key in repairing DNA. Researchers think that a lack of folate makes genetic mutations. And that damaged DNA can go cancerous.

 

So how much folate do you need for this big cancer- preventing boost? Women getting at least 300 micrograms a day saw the best benefit—a 64% lower risk of colon cancer. Women consuming more than 270 micrograms a day slashed their risk in half.

 

Besides supplements, you can get your daily folate in veggies and fruits like spinach, green beans, peppers, and citrus fruits.

 

Osteoporosis

by Nick Soloway

OSTEOPOROSIS

There are two supplements that have been shown to be effective in the treatment of osteoporosis. The first one is called ipriflavone and the other is called strontium. Both of these supplements have been shown to increase bone density in people taking them.

 

Ipriflavone

 

In most double-blind placebo-controlled studies of Ipriflavone, involving a total of over 1700 enrolled subjects, results demonstrated either a significant bone sparing effect or improvements in bone mineral density measured at the radius, whole body, or vertebra. In studies that ranged from six months to two years bone mineral density in the Ipriflavone groups increased from 0.7% to 7.1% over the course of the studies. In comparison, the placebo groups had losses as high as 5%. The dosage of Ipriflavone used was 200 mg daily plus 1 g of supplemental calcium.

 

In other studies looking at the rate of fractures Ipriflavone again showed significant effects. In one study there was a 50% reduction in the rate of new vertebral fractures in the first year of Ipriflavone treatment.

 

For the most part, all of the studies of Ipriflavone have been positive. In a very recent study Ipriflavone did not show any benefit. The explanation of this result may be that the trial group did not take sufficient calcium. In the previous studies, all of the participants took 1 g of supplemental calcium but in this study participants took just half of the amount.

 

Generally, Ipriflavone is well tolerated by people, although mild gastrointestinal distress can occur. In certain individuals with low white blood count numbers or immunosuppressed systems may want to avoid taking Ipriflavone. Similar to Grapefruit, Ipriflavone may cause an increase in the blood levels of certain medications. So if you are taking medication that says to avoid grapefruit you should maybe avoid taking Ipriflavone. In general, Ipriflavone can be used by the majority of people who are experiencing osteoporosis or want to maintain good bone density.

You can read a monograph on the Ipriflavone at the following site:

http://www.vitalnutrients.net/research.htm

 

Strontium

The patent medicine osteoporosis remedy that kills bone cells—and the all-natural alternatives that save them.

This article is by Dr. Jonathan Wright, MD

 

A few months ago at the Tahoma Clinic I visited with a man—let’s call him Derek—who had been diagnosed with early osteoporosis. He had heard of the connection between good testosterone levels and healthy bones, and he wanted to have his levels checked to see if he should try supplementing with this hormone.

 

Derek’s regular medical doctor, a member of an insurance company preferred provider network, told him he should take Boniva, a “biphosphonate” patent medication. A two-year double-blind, placebo-controlled “prevention” study had shown that Boniva increases bone density in post-menopausal women by approximately 3 percent in the spine, and approximately 2 percent at the hip. A similar three-year treatment study had shown a very significant reduction in new vertebral fractures. Derek had done some basic Internet research and had found that millions of Americans were using biphosphonates for the treatment and prevention of osteoporosis.

 

Unfortunately, Boniva also kills certain bone cells.

 

I read the following excerpt to him from an information bulletin on the product: “Boniva is a biphosphonate, a metabolic poison that kills the osteoclast bone cells that help create the balance between bone resorption and bone building, thus forcing an increase in bone mass.” I skipped to the side effects section, which included the following: “dyspepsia [heartburn, indigestion, stomach pain], diarrhea, tooth disorder, vomiting, gastritis, infection, and allergic reaction.”

 

Derek was alarmed when he found out the truth, and I’m sure many of you are feeling the same—especially if you’re taking Boniva.

 

But you may be wondering, as Derek did, if testosterone and calcium are enough to improve your bone health. I told him I would certainly recommend testosterone if his tests showed the need. But there are other effective options for improving your bone health that don’t require hormonal therapy. In fact, the people I’ve worked with have experienced between 3 and 11 percent improvement in bone density in just one year by using calcium, strontium, vitamin D, and a variety of other nutrients.

 

The mineral that can make calcium even more effective

 

Taking strontium in addition to calcium is more effective than calcium alone. Numerous studies have demonstrated that strontium does much more than slow the deterioration of your bones—it actually stimulates rapid bone formation. A 2004 double-blind, placebo controlled study published in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that a combination of strontium ranelate, calcium, and vitamin D increased bone density by 9 to 15 percent over three years.1 Research conducted in the 80s by one of the same researchers showed under-the-microscope improvement in bone density with strontium carbonate and calcium. And research done at the Mayo Clinic in the 50s showed both clinical and x-ray improvement with a third form of strontium.

 

For best results, I also recommend having a gastric analysis. Twenty years of tests done at the Tahoma Clinic have shown that 90 percent of individuals with osteoporosis have low stomach acid. If your stomach acid is low, your body won’t be able to absorb calcium, strontium, and other minerals nearly as well, and your results won’t be as good.

 

You can take these and other bone- building nutrients separately, or all together in one bone-building combination formula. If you take them separately, be sure to always use at least twice as much calcium as strontium. Because some leading researchers state that calcium and strontium mutually inhibit each other’s absorption, either calcium or strontium should be taken in the morning and the other taken at night.

 

Citations available upon request and on the Nutrition & Healing website: www.wrightnewsletter.com

 

 

Other nutrients

One of the most important nutrients involved with bone health is Vitamin D

Many people don’t get enough Vitamin D. You may need to reexamine your Vitamin D intake to make sure you get at least 1000 Units a day The following link is to an article on Vitamin D. You can also do a search for Vitamin D at this site to learn more.

http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20050430/food.asp

 

Other important nutrients include Vitamin K, boron, and vanadium. If you are taking a high quality multi-vitamin these should be in the formula.

 

You should be taking a high quality multi-vitamin!!!!

Neck Pain

by Nick Soloway

More on EFT ( Emotional Freedom Technique)

I have purchased all the EFT DVDs and am amazed how well it works.

First, I suggest that you go to the EFT website and watch the video located in the left hand column.

Buy the first set of DVDs “The EFT Course” and be amazed by seeing EFT at work. If you buy more than one set of DVDs there is a great discount.

To find out more about EFT and buy the DVDs go to this site:
www.emofree.com/a/?2765

Neck Tension:

 

If you are bothered by chronic neck tension it may be due to your glasses. I have noticed that many people with chronic neck tension wear either bifocal glasses or trifocals. And many of these people also are looking at a computer screen all day long. Because the visual field of the magnifying section of the glasses is smaller than the computer screen, people have to nod their head all day long to see all the information on the screen. And as a result, the neck gets tighter and tighter.

The easiest solution to this is to get a pair of reading glasses and use them while doing computer work and regular reading. Save the bifocals or trifocals for tasks that require near and distance seeing like driving a car.

Osteoporosis:

“Tea drinking is associated with benefits on bone density in older women,” Devine A, Hodgson JM, et al, Am J Clin Nutr, 2007; 86(4): 1243-7. .

Summary: In a study involving a cross-sectional analysis of the relation between tea intake and hip structure and a prospective analysis of the relation between tea intake and hip structure over 4 years of follow-up, results indicate that tea drinking (black tea and green tea, but not herbal tea) exerts beneficial effects on bone structure by reducing bone loss in elderly women.

 

In a cross-sectional analysis involving 1,027 women aged 70-85 years, usual tea intake was assessed by using a questionnaire, and hip structure was assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) areal bone mineral density (aBMD). Total hip aBMD was 2.8% greater in tea drinkers than in non-tea drinkers.

In a prospective analysis involving 164 elderly women, the relation of tea intake at baseline with change in aBMD over a 4 year period was assessed.

After 4 years, tea drinkers showed an average loss of 1.6% of their total hip aBMD, compared to baseline, whereas non-tea drinkers showed an average loss of 4.0% of their total aBMD, compared to baseline.

 

Thus, the authors of this study conclude, “Tea drinking is associated with preservation of hip structure in elderly women. This finding provides further evidence of the beneficial effects of tea consumption on the skeleton.”

Tea has so many more benefits try to drink a few cups a day. It helps fight tooth decay, been linked to reducing prostate cancer, can increase body metabolism for weight loss and a lot more.

 

High Blood Pressure:

 

Here is an article by Dr. Michael Murray on celery seed extract. Celery (around four stalks a day) has been shown to reduce blood pressure up to 10-20 points. Celery seed extract (3nB) is a concentrate that is more convenient for some people. I have it for sale and it is also available at most health food stores.

http://www.doctormurray.com/articles/pdfs/PADM4515CelerySeed.pdf

Vaccinations:

 

Here is an article by Gary Null and Martin Feldman

http://www.townsendletter.com/Oct2007/vaccinate_null1007.htm

Lithium

by Nick Soloway

This is quite a long email about the benefits of low dose lithium.

Lithium is cited here to help gout, immune problems, alcoholism, depression, fibromyalgia, Alzheimer’s disease, brain cell death, herpes, Grave’s disease, anorexia, cluster headaches.

 

The information below is from:
http://www.wrightnewsletter.com/

 

You can go there and sign up for a snailmail newsletter and access to the entire site of searchable past articles.

 

LITHIUM The misunderstood mineral, Part 1:

 

Think young into your 90s with this anti-aging secret for your brain

By Jonathan V. Wright, M.D.

 

The biggest problem with lithium treatment is people’s perception of it. Since its most well known use is for bi-polar disorder, lithium sometimes encounters the same stigma as mental illness itself.

 

I’ve been taking a lithium supplement every day for several years. When I tell people about it, they sometimes get funny looks on their faces and start eyeing the corners of the room for straight jackets. These reactions don’t surprise me, since, as I said, lithium is usually associated with mental illness. But I’ve never suffered from a mental disorder (although certain mainstream medical doctors and possibly a federal agency or two might disagree).

 

Treating manic-depressive (bi-polar) illness is lithium’s most widely known use–but it isn’t an anti-psychotic drug, as many people believe. In fact, lithium isn’t a drug at all. It’s actually a mineral-part of the same family of minerals that includes sodium and potassium.

 

You might remember reading several editions of Health e-Tips a few months ago that discussed various benefits of lithium. In addition to the benefits mentioned in the e-Tips, like controlling gout and relieving rashes caused by sebhorric dermatitis, lithium also has some great brain-boosting effects. In fact, I’ve reviewed both recent lithium research and the research spanning the past few decades, and I’m convinced that lithium is an anti-aging nutrient for human brains. And there are also some very strong reasons to believe that lithium therapy will slow the progression of serious degenerative mental problems, including Alzheimer’s disease, senile dementia, and Parkinson’s disease.

 

So there are obviously quite a few “pros” to using lithium, but you’re probably wondering about the “cons.” In the 1930s and ’40s, lithium chloride was sold in stores as a salt substitute. But (as frequently happens) some people used way too much and suffered toxic overdoses, so it fell out of common use. Fortunately, lithium toxicity is entirely preventable, and it’s also easily treatable if it ever does occur -but more about that later. Right now, let’s get into some of the specifics on just how you (and your brain) can benefit from lithium.

 

Taking (grey) matters into your own hands

 

Hercule Poirot, Agatha Christie’s famous fictional detective, had an amusing quirk in his incessant concern for his “little grey cells.” I thought of Hercule several years ago when I saw the following headline in an issue of the Lancet: “Lithium-induced increase in human brain grey matter.”

 

That may not sound like an earth-shattering piece of news, but it actually was quite a major discovery. To that point, medical experts believed that once our brains matured, it was all downhill from then on. Decades of autopsies, x-rays, and, more recently, brain scans have repeatedly shown that brains shrink measurably with aging. But according to their report in the Lancet, Wayne State University (Detroit) researchers found that lithium has the ability to both protect and renew brain cells.1 Eight of 10 individuals who took lithium showed an average 3 percent increase in brain grey matter in just four weeks.

 

Lithium may help to generate entirely new cells too: Another group of researchers recently reported that lithium also enhances nerve cell DNA replication. 2 DNA replication is a first step in the formation of a new cell of any type.

 

The Wayne State study used high-dose lithium, but I’m certainly not using that amount myself, nor do I recommend it. Prescription quantities of lithium just aren’t necessary for “everyday” brain cell protection and re-growth. Studies done years ago have shown that very low amounts of lithium can also measurably influence brain function for the better.

Protect yourself from brain damage you didn’t even know you had.

 

Aside from boosting brain mass, recent research also shows that lithium can help protect your brain from the “beating” it gets in the course of everyday life. Your brain cells are constantly at risk of damage from exposure to toxins of all sorts-even ones produced by your own body. Toxic molecules are formed naturally during the course of normal brain metabolism.3-7 Since these “normal” toxic molecules (sometimes called “excitotoxins”) are produced every day of your life, eventually they start to wear down or erode away brain mass.

 

Another well-known cause of brain cell injury is overactivated N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. Lithium can inhibit this overactivity.8 And lithium also increases production of a major brain protective protein called “bcl-2” in both human and animal brain cells.9

 

So it appears that lithium can protect against normal brain erosion and shrinkage that would otherwise occur over the course of our lives. But lithium also protects the brain from other less “normal” problems too, like damage caused by prescription medications and strokes.

 

When a clot or other obstruction occurs in a blood vessel serving the brain, it causes a reduction of blood flow to that area. If it’s bad enough, the lack of blood flow will cause a stroke and death of brain cells. (This type of stroke is known as an ischemic stroke.) Research in experimental animals with deliberately induced ischemic strokes has shown that lithium reduces the areas of cell death.10,11

 

In one of these studies, researchers blocked a brain artery in rats. Some were pre-treated with lithium for 16 days, the rest weren’t. The researchers reported that the lithium-treated rats experienced 56 percent less cell death and significantly fewer neurologic deficits than the control rats.12

 

And sometimes medications designed to treat other problems end up having a negative impact on the brain. For example, anti-convulsant medications cause abnormal levels of brain cell death. But lithium significantly protects against this type of cell death-so much so that this effect has been called “robust” (a term scientists use to mean “It really works!”).13

 

In fact, based on its general neuroprotective effect, researchers have recently suggested that “the use of lithium as a neurotrophic/ neuroprotective agent should be considered in the long term treatment of mood disorders, irrespective of the ‘primary’ treatment modality being used for the condition.

 

“14 Translation: Lithium should be used along with any patent medicine being used for depression, anxiety, or any other “mood-altering” reason, since it will protect brain cells against their unwanted toxic effects. The researchers didn’t say so, but I will: Any list of “mood altering substances” should include alcohol, tobacco, caffeine, “uppers,” “downers,” and-for those who do inhale-marijuana. Harmless as some of them might seem, these substances can cause brain damage with medium to long-term abuse.

 

Keeping your brain’s lines of communication open -and healthy.

 

Scientists determine how healthy brain cells are by measuring levels of a molecule called N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA). A decrease in NAA is thought to reflect decreased nerve cell viability, decreased function, or even nerve cell loss.15 In a study of 19 research volunteers given four weeks of lithium, 14 experienced a significant increase in NAA, one had no change, and four had a small decrease.16

 

Now, what about the interaction between those new, protected, healthy brain cells? Communication between brain cells and networks of brain cells is called “signaling.” And lithium is actually necessary for at least two signal-carrying pathways.17 Researchers have also reported that lithium may help to repair abnormally functioning signaling pathways in critical areas of the brain.18

 

Lithium and Alzheimer’s: New hope for a “hopeless” situation.

 

As you know, there’s no cure for Alzheimer’s disease and there’s very little available for patients (and families) that can offer even partial relief from the turmoil it causes. So when new treatments are developed or discovered, it’s usually big news -a ray of hope for people stuck in a seemingly hopeless situation. One of these newly developed patent medications, called Memantine,(tm) was recently approved in Europe. Even though it’s not officially “approved” in this country (yet), thousands of people are already importing Memantine to the U.S. via various Internet sources. But why go through all the trouble (not to mention risk) of getting and using this new patent formula?

 

Apparently, it “works” by protecting brain cells against damage caused by a major excitotoxin, glutamate. But protecting against glutamate-induced nerve cell damage is also one of the well-known actions of lithium. So if it’s true that this newly approved patent medication slows the progress of Alzheimer’s disease in this way, then lithium should slow Alzheimer’s disease progression, too. Of course, lithium treatment, which isn’t patentable and doesn’t have nearly the profit potential of patented Alzheimers medications, hasn’t made any headlines. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t a promising option for patients struggling with Alzheimer’s disease.

 

There are many other research findings that also strongly suggest that lithium will protect against potential Alzheimer’s disease and slow the progression of existing cases. Researchers have reported that lithium inhibits beta-amyloid secretion, and also prevents damage caused by beta-amyloid protein once it’s been formed.20-23 Beta-amyloid peptide is a signature protein involved in Alzheimer’s disease: the more beta-amyloid protein, the worse the Alzheimer’s becomes.

 

Overactivation of a brain cell protein called tau protein also contributes to neuronal degeneration in Alzheimer’s disease, as does the formation of neurofibrillary tangles Lithium inhibits both of these nerve-cell damaging problems.24,25

 

And you’ve likely read that individuals with Alzheimer’s disease usually have excess aluminum accumulation in brain cells. While it’s not yet known whether this excess aluminum is a cause, an effect, or just coincidental, most health-conscious individuals take precautions to avoid ingesting aluminum. Unfortunately, it’s impossible to completely avoid all aluminum, since it’s naturally present in nearly all foods. But lithium can help protect your brain against aluminum by helping to “chelate” it so that it can be more easily removed from the body.25

 

Although Alzheimer’s disease and senile dementia aren’t technically the same, they do share many of the same degenerative features so there’s every reason to expect that lithium will help prevent or slow the progression of senile dementia too.

 

A younger, healthier brain with just one small dose a day

 

As I mentioned earlier, some of these studies used rather high doses of lithium. And in some instances, as in the case of manic depression, doses as high as 90 to 180 milligrams of elemental lithium from 900 to 1800 milligrams of lithium carbo-nate are necessary. Quantities of lithium in that range must be monitored closely to guard against overdose and toxicity.

 

But you really don’t need large amounts to improve your “every-day” brain function. Studies have repeatedly shown that substantially lower amounts of lithium can significantly improve brain function (as reflected in behavior).

 

The amounts of lithium I recommend for brain anti-aging range from 10 to 20 milligrams (from lithium aspartate or lithium orotate) daily. I’ve actually been recommending these amounts since the 1970s. At first I was exceptionally cautious and asked all of my patients taking lithium to have regular “lithium level” blood tests and thyroid function tests. After a year or so, I quit asking for the lithium level blood tests, since 100 percent of them came back very low. Another year after that, I stopped requesting routine thyroid function tests, too, only doing one when I was suspicious of a potential problem. In the 30 years since, I’ve rarely found one.

 

Protect your brain starting today–no prescription necessary

 

High-dose lithium is available only by prescription. But low-dose lithium (capsules or tablets containing 5 milligrams of lithium from lithium aspartate or lithium orotate) is available from a few natural food stores and compounding pharmacies,he Tahoma Clinic Dispensary (see page 8).

 

If you’re interested in keeping your brain as young as possible for as long as possible, you should definitely consider lithium therapy. Review this information with your physician…but make sure he is skilled and knowledgeable in nutritional and natural medicine! (If yours isn’t, see “Resources” on page 8 for a list of organizations that can help you find one near you who is.)

 

A sneak peek at even more lithium secrets:

Next month, I’ll review lithium’s many other effects-from preventing anorexia to relieving cluster headaches, to lowering blood sugar (and that’s just to name a few!). I think you’ll be surprised at just how versatile this misunderstood mineral can be.

In the meantime, if you’d like to read the Health e-Tips on lithium (or to sign up to begin receiving these free e-mail updates), visit the Nutrition & Healing website at www.wrightnewsletter.com. JVW

Citations available upon request and on the Nutrition & Healing website: www.wrightnewsletter.com

A better sense of direction in just 24 hours:

 

“Spatial memory” is the scientific-lingo term for what most of us call “sense of direction.” If you’ve ever “lost” your car in a crowded parking lot, you know just how handy a good “spatial memory” can be. Now it looks like it might be possible to improve your sense of direction in as little as 24 hours.

When researchers study this concept they usually use animals in mazes. The experiments generally involve examining what effects various things have on the animals’ ability to remember how to navigate their way through the maze. In one such study, researchers observed the navigating ability of lithium treated and untreated rats for four months. They found that lithium improved the rats’ spatial memory with as little as 24 hours of exposure.19

 

Using lithium safely:

 

Over a decade ago, a woman visited the Tahoma Clinic on the advice of her psychiatrist. She was severely bipolar, requiring a maximum dose of lithium carbonate to keep her symptoms under control. Despite close monitoring of serum lithium levels to maintain a safe range, she was starting to show many signs of lithium toxicity, including hypertension, tremor, nausea, and protein in her urine. She and her psychiatrist had tried other medications, but none provided the control of her bipolar symptoms that lithium did. So she came to the Tahoma Clinic to see if there were any natural options for her.

 

Fortunately, there was a simple solution. Without changing her lithium dose, the clinic doctor treating her asked the woman to start taking 1 tablespoon of flaxseed oil along with 800 IU of vitamin E (mixed tocopherols) three times a day. One month later, the woman’s blood pressure had normalized, her tremors and nausea were gone, and there was no further protein in the urine. And best of all, her bipolar symptoms remained under control. At that point, she was able to cut the flaxseed oil to 1 tablespoon daily along with 400 IU of vitamin E. Several years later, her lithium toxicity hasn’t returned.

 

To be on the safe side, I always recommend that anyone taking lithium also take a teaspoonful or two of flaxseed oil (or other essential fatty acid) along with 400 IU of vitamin E (as mixed tocopherols) each day.

 

The misunderstood mineral, Part 2:

 

Lithium fights crime and some of your most nagging health concerns

 

By Jonathan V. Wright, M.D.

 

Turns out it’s not only the strict use of the death penalty lowering crime rates in some areas of Texas. And while I’m sure “Dubya” would be quick to take credit, it’s not stricter laws or changes in sentencing guidelines either. Using 10 years of data accumulated from 27 Texas counties, researchers found that the incidence of homicide, rape, burglary, and suicide, as well as other crimes and drug use, were significantly lower in counties whose drinking water supplies contained 70-170 micrograms of lithium per liter than those with little or no lithium in their water.

 

The researchers wrote: “These results suggest that lithium at low dosage levels has a generally beneficial effect on human behavior…increasing the human lithium intakes by supplementation, or the lithiation [adding lithium] of drinking water is suggested as a possible means of crime, suicide, and drug-dependency reduction at the individual and community level.”

And that’s not to mention all of the lithium health benefits we went over last month: It may be useful in treating Alzheimer’s disease, senile dementia, and possibly Parkinson’s disease. Lithium not only protects brain cells against normal wear and tear, but also offers additional protection against a whole variety of toxic molecules, including patent medications. It can also promote brain cell regeneration and increase brain cell mass. In essence, the research suggests that lithium is a brain anti-aging nutrient.

All of these results are every bit as good as (if not better than) the data that led to dumping toxic waste (fluoride) into so many public water supplies. So why haven’t public health and safety “authorities” been pushing for further intensive research on water-borne lithium and criminal behavior?

 

I’m certainly not in favor of the government adding anything to pure drinking water. But if it insists on forcibly mass-medicating us through our water supply (a thoroughly un-American concept I’m 100 percent against no matter what the added substance is), why haven’t they considered adding something that might actually do some real good for people’s health and safety? Isn’t the possibility of reducing homicide, suicide, rape, robbery, burglary, theft, mental hospital admissions, and drug addiction related arrests just as important as the possibly of preventing tooth decay?

 

Call me pessimistic, but I suspect lithium is still being ignored because no huge, politically connected industry has enormous quantities of lithium-containing waste lying around. (In the 1940s, that’s exactly how water fluoridation began, by using up huge quantities of fluoride-containing toxic waste generated by the politically connected aluminum industry.)

 

But if there’s one thing we all know about the U.S. government, it’s that we shouldn’t wait for the people running it to do anything to help us, especially when we can help ourselves. So today let’s go over a few more of lithium’s benefits and I’ll tell you how you can help yourself to this valuable mineral right now.

 

Lithium tackles another addiction:

 

In 30 years of nutritionally oriented practice, I’ve been told by many alcoholics and their relatives that low-dose lithium can be very helpful for both alcoholism and associated mood disorders. For “practicing” alcoholics, I recommend a trial of lithium orotate, 10 milligrams three times daily (along with diet advice, niacin, glutamine, and other supplements). I ask recovering alcoholics to try 5 milligrams, three times daily (occasionally more). The majority of these patients report improved mood and decreased desire for alcohol after about six weeks using lithium therapy.

 

According to one review article in the British Journal of Addiction, “both controlled and uncontrolled experiments show that symptoms of both alcoholism and affective disturbance are reduced in patients treated with lithium.”2 (All of the studies reviewed used high dose prescription lithium.)

 

I also often recommend direct blood relatives of alcoholics (parents, children, or siblings) consider a trial of lithium orotate, 5 milligrams two or three times daily, even if they have never noticed a mood problem. I explain that this is a “personal clinical trial,” and a safe one, that they can discontinue in six to eight weeks if they don’t feel a difference. I also ask that the individual discuss this personal clinical trial with their husband, wife, or other close household member, since I’ve found that the individual doesn’t always notice subtle (or even not-so-subtle) mood changes in himself. But immediate family members notice-particularly when the changes are for the better! I haven’t kept a count of exactly how many individuals have tried this approach over the last 30 years, but it’s probably somewhere in the vicinity of 300 to 400-maybe more. And the majority report positive changes: less depression and irritability for women, and less irritability and “temper” for men.

 

Can lithium help solve your health mysteries?

 

So far, you’ve read about how lithium can help combat mental illness, mood disorders, and chemical dependency. All of these benefits, in turn, help communities become safer places overall by reducing rates of violent crime. And, yes, increased safety does benefit you and me. But right now, let’s discuss some ways that you might be able to put lithium to work in your own life with some surprising applications for a few rather “mysterious” conditions.

By “mysterious,” I don’t mean brand-new, mutated viruses like the recent outbreak of SARS. No, the conditions I’ll go over today have been around for quite a while. But the mystery lies in the fact they each of them is still considered “incurable.” Let’s start with one of the most painful.

 

Fibromyalgia relief: This “last resort” could rank No. 1

 

This condition primarily strikes women and causes debilitating pain and stiffness. Lithium can help alleviate these symptoms without the problems associated with conventional fibromyalgia treatments, which include tranquilizer, antidepressant, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications (which only temporarily mask the pain and sleeplessness that often occur).

 

One study examined three women suffering from fibromyalgia, none of whom had responded to conventional treatment. When researchers added lithium to the women’s current treatment, all three noticed a marked reduction in their symptoms.3

 

The authors of the study didn’t explain why they didn’t have the women discontinue their ineffective conventional treatments, but I’ve got a pretty good idea that their motives might have had something to do with the fact that the conventional treatments, as useless as they were for these women, are the “standard” protocol.

 

But I digress.

 

The gout-eliminating combination that tastes as good as it feels

 

You might remember reading the Health e-Tip on lithium and gout several months ago (2/3/03, subject line: “Help! My big toe is on fire!”). As the e-Tip mentioned, gout occurs when the body can’t process and eliminate excess uric acid. The result is a painful burning or stabbing sensation usually in the ball joint of the foot.

 

Although there are no published studies on this topic, over the years I’ve found the combination of low-dose lithium (10-15 milligrams twice daily) and vitamin C (2 grams twice daily) can be very effective in preventing recurrent attacks of gout. Vitamin C significantly reduces serum uric acid levels. Lithium makes uric acid more soluble so it doesn’t crystallize into painful “needles.” These two actions combine to significantly reduce gout attacks. If you have gout, I also recommend that you drink 32 oz. of cherry juice at the first sign of an attack. Just please make sure it’s real cherry juice–no sugar added. Although no one is sure why or how it works, studies have shown that cherry juice usually eliminates the pain of acute gout.

 

85 percent cluster headache relief in just two weeks

 

Cluster headaches are another one of those inexplicable conditions that my patients tell me always seem to come on at exactly the wrong time. In fact, they might actually be one of the most “myst-erious” of the conditions I’ve listed so far since, like fibromyalgia, the cause isn’t known. They tend to attack relentlessly for weeks to months and then often go into remission for months or even years. But lithium (in relatively high doses) can significantly reduce both the severity and frequency.

 

One study examined lithium’s effects on 19 men with cluster headaches. Eight had rapid improve- ment-an average 85 percent reduction-in their “headache index” in just two weeks. Four individuals had both cluster headaches and psychiatric symptoms; these four had almost complete elimination of their headaches. The remaining seven had only a slight benefit.5

 

Another research group tried lithium therapy (again, relatively high quantities) for 14 individuals with cluster headaches. Five indiv-iduals had complete disappearance of their headaches, four had significant improvement, and four had no change.6

There’s no guarantee that lithium will cure your cluster headaches, but there is a good chance that it might help. With so few other options available, it’s at least worth a try.

 

Simple relief from those annoyingly persistent problems

 

Along the same lines as these mysterious conditions are a few other conditions that lithium can benefit. But these are less on the mysterious side and more in the vein of annoyingly persistent. Even so, lithium can still help in a number of ways.

 

One research group reported that lithium inhibits the reproduction of several viruses, including herpes simplex viruses (HSV 1, HSV 2), adenovirus (the “common cold” virus), cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus (associated with mononucleosis and many cases of chronic fatigue), and the measles virus.7

 

Another randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of lithium carbonate (doses ranging from 150-900 milligrams daily) demonstrated “a consistent reduction in the number of herpes episodes per month, the average duration of each episode, the total number of infection days per month, and the maximum symptom severity. In contrast, treatment with placebo resulted in an increase in three of the four severity measures.”8

 

In addition to lithium, selenium, lysine, and other nutrients can also help suppress the reproduction of herpes simplex (and other viruses) and speed the recovery process should an active infection occur. I tend to think it’s better-and safer-to follow this approach (using small quantities of several effective nutr-ients rather than a larger quantity of just one), so nearly 10 years ago I worked with Bio-Tech Pharmacal to create a useful anti-herpes formula. We combined low-dose lithium with selenium, lysine, vitamin C, olive leaf extract, and other nutrients into two formulas, one (called HPX) for prevention of herpes simplex, and the other (called HPX2) for treatment of outbreaks. Those who have used it tell me it does the job, cutting down or eliminating recurrent herpes infections and/or helping them heal more quickly when they do occur. HPX and HPX2 are both available through natural food stores, compounding pharmacies and the Tahoma Clinic Dispensary.

 

A quick end to a Grave disease

 

Hyperthyroidism can be persistent and difficult to treat. It comes on either very suddenly or very gradually-so gradually, you might not even notice that something is really wrong until the symptoms become severe. Graves’ disease is one of the common names for hyperthyroidism. In this condition, the immune system disrupts the functioning of the thyroid gland, causing it to become enlarged and to secrete too much hormone.

 

Mainstream treatments completely shut down the production of thyroid hormone using dangerous patent medicines. But lithium can get to the root of the problem much more safely.

 

In 1972, Mayo Clinic researchers published the first clinical investigation of lithium treatment for Graves’ disease.9 Using high-dose lithium for 10 individuals, they reported that thyroid hormone levels fell by 20-30 percent within five days.

 

Twenty-six years later, in a review of more than 10 successful trials of lithium therapy for Graves’ disease, the authors wrote: “a small number of studies have documented its [lithium’s] use in the treatment of patients with Graves’ disease… it’s efficacy and utility as an altern-ative anti-thyroid [treatment] are not widely recognized…”10 They also note lithium’s rapid effect: “Lithium normalizes [thyroid hormone] levels in one to two weeks…” But they also caution that “toxicity precludes its use as a first-line or long-term therapeutic agent.” If they’d just added flaxseed oil and vitamin E to their treatment, they would have basically eliminated the risk of toxicity. (See the box on page 5 for details.)

 

Lithium’s benefits: Ripe for the picking

 

Perhaps the budding evidence about lithium and brain protection will spark even more interest in researching this mineral. Maybe researchers will accumulate enough evidence to prove that lithium can slow or even reverse brain aging. And perhaps researchers will conclude that putting very low dose lithium into drinking water to reduce violent crime is even more important than adding fluoride to prevent tooth decay.

 

But I won’t hold my breath. Lithium isn’t patentable, so I doubt that patent-medicine companies will even consider funneling huge amounts of research dollars into it. And if the patent-medicine companies aren’t interested in it, it isn’t likely to be “approved” for these or other uses any time soon. But remember, “approval” does not ensure safety or effectiveness; it just means that procedures have been followed, forms have been filled out, and money-lots and lots of money-has changed hands.

 

Now for the good news: Just because lithium won’t be formulated into the next wonder drug and isn’t likely to be making the headlines of your local news, that certainly doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy all of its benefits-from brain anti-aging to headache relief–right now. Low-dose lithium supplements are available in some natural food stores or from the Tahoma Clinic Dispensary.

 

If you decide to give lithium a try, as with any new treatment or preventive measure (even an all-natural one), it’s always a good idea to consult with a physician skilled and knowledgeable in natural medicine as part of your decision. See the Resources section on page 8 for a list of sources that can help you find one in your area. JVW

 

Citations available upon request and on the Nutrition & Healing website: www.wrightnewsletter.com

 

A light at the end of the anorexia tunnel

 

Eating disorders remain a mystery to many people because those who battle with them keep their struggle a secret for as long as they possibly can. By the time someone recognizes the problem, it’s often very difficult to help the victim. Lithium may offer a bit more hope to these people and their families. Although zinc is a usually successful mainstay of anorexia treatment, lithium can help in regaining much-needed weight. Two adult women suffering from anorexia for many years were given (high dose) lithium; in just six weeks, one gained 26 pounds and the other 20 pounds. Although neither woman was cured of anorexia, they both experienced significant improvements.4

 

High, low, very small: Which lithium dose is which?

 

Mainstream uses of lithium usually call for 300-milligram lithium carbonate capsules, which contain approximately 30 milligrams of elemental lithium per capsule. A typical daily recommendation is one or two capsules, three times daily for a total of 90 to 180 milligrams of elemental lithium. It’s much more likely that you could experience toxic effects with these amounts, so if you need this much, you should work closely with a physician who can monitor your levels.

 

But most of the uses for lithium covered in this issue and in last month’s issue don’t require such high amounts. Low-dose lithium is available in supplement form in natural food stores. The most commonly available forms include lithium orotate and lithium aspartate, each containing 5 milligrams of elemental lithium per tablet.

 

Even at a quantity of two low-dose tablets three times daily (for a total 30 milligrams of elemental lithium), patients’ serum lithium usually stay in the “non-detectable” or “below therapeutic.” range, which means that they’re very safe. In my 30 years of practice, I’ve never had a patient report symptoms of lithium excess. But just to be on the safe side, I always recommend taking extra quantities of essential fatty acids to prevent any possibility of lithium toxicity (see the box titled “Using Lithium Safely” on page 4 of last month’s Nutrition & Healing issue for more information).

 

Some of the research I wrote about this month didn’t use either higher dose prescription lithium or lower dose supplemental lithium, but examined the effects of “very small dose” lithium present naturally in some drinking water. But even these very small doses produced some amazing effects in lowered crime rates and other general benefits.

 

Build a better internal defense with just two doses a day

 

Keeping a normal white blood cell count is one of the very basic necessities for good health. Your body uses white blood cells to fight off viruses, bacteria, and all sorts of potentially harmful foreign invaders. If your levels fall for some reason, you’re much more prone to illness. Chemotherapy and radiation are probably the most well-known offenders causing low white cell counts, but levels can fall for any number of reasons. This is where lithium comes in: Researchers have found that it can increase white cell numbers again in people whose levels fell due to radiation and/or chemotherapy (and even if the person continues those treatments).

 

Lithium achieves these effects by stimulating the stem cells in bone marrow, which then turn into platelets and white blood cells. I’ve observed that low dose lithium (5-10 milligrams twice daily) will also usually raise a low count to normal even if radiation and chemotherapy aren’t the culprits.

 

Misunderstood mineral shields your brain and wipes out mild depression

If you haven’t thought much about lithium since we covered it last August and September, it’s still worth considering. Despite the stigma associated with it, this mineral is one of the most effective natural brain boosters available. And I can personally vouch for its effects, since I take a small amount every day. Now the results of another recent study have proven its ability to protect against brain damage caused by strokes.

 

The study in experimental animals has shown that low-dose lithium protects brain cells against the effects of lack of blood flow, which occurs in humans during ischemic strokes.1 Two groups of animals (in this case, gerbils) had their carotid arteries cut off for five minutes. One group had five days of pre-treatment with low-dose lithium, the other had no lithium pre-treatment.

 

Twenty-four hours later, the lithium pre-treated group showed significantly less brain cell death than the non-treated group. The number of remaining brain cells after five minutes of no blood flow was 470 in the lithium pre-treated group and 370 in the lithium-free group. While the lithium pre-treated group definitely suffered brain cell loss, the loss was much less than that suffered by the lithium-free group.

 

Obviously, it’s best to prevent a stroke before it happens. (For a few tips about stroke prevention, see the July 2002 issue of Nutrition & Healing.) But just in case, and especially if you have a family history of stroke, please consider using low-dose lithium to protect your brain cells-not only against brain cell death from stroke, but against dementia and many, many other causes of brain cell deterioration.

 

The treatment turning lives around

 

In addition to the new research boosting lithium’s reputation, the first-hand accounts continue to trickle in too. Every few months, someone calls the Tahoma Clinic or writes to me to report that his or her life has turned around thanks to low-dose lithium. It happened again just last week.

 

I’d seen Lynn T. just once for an initial consultation. We’d gone over her health history, done a physical exam, and I suggested some tests for her to consider. Although she reported no problem herself, she had a family history of alcoholism on both sides. Before she left, I explained the research concerning alcoholism and lithium, and told her how, over the years, I’d found that low-dose lithium often helps relatives of alcoholics, particularly in mood and attitude. Although she didn’t think she had a problem, she said she’d like to try it, so I recommended 15 milligrams daily, along with a small amount of flaxseed oil and vitamin E, to prevent even the remote possibility of adverse effects.

 

Lynn said she “couldn’t believe it, but it’s like I’m almost a different person.” Before, she’d been shy and withdrawn, but within three weeks she found herself starting conversations with people she didn’t know at all. She decided she must have been mildly depressed for much of her life, because after just three weeks of the lithium she was more optimistic and cheerful. She told me she was “just enjoying life more.”

 

Only a small percentage of relatives of alcoholics-as well as alcoholics and recovering alcoholics-experience these kinds of dramatic changes. But most people who try it report that low dose lithium helps at least a little. If you have alcoholism in your family, it can’t hurt to try.

 

For further details about low-dose lithium and brain function, as well as about the safety of low-dose lithium, see Nutrition & Healing for August and September 2003.

Knee Surgery

by Nick Soloway

Knee Surgery

Study says common surgical procedure could be useless

From William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.

You might want to think twice before getting that knee surgery. According to a new study, the use of arthroscopy to treat arthritis in the knee may do nothing to improve the condition. In fact, the study of 178 men and women who’d undergone the surgery showed that the patients fared no better than other sufferers who were treated only with physical therapy and medication.

 

Study author Brian Feagan of the University of Western Ontario says his research shows “definitive evidence” that arthroscopy is ineffective. “If it isn’t effective, patients should not be undergoing it,” he says.

 

Amen to that. But good luck trying to convince the current healthcare system that a procedure that’s not only common, but uncommonly lucrative, should be pulled off the table based on a relatively small sample group of 178 patients.

 

The issue here is not only that the surgery is ineffective — it’s that ALL surgeries, no matter how seemingly “minor” come with a risk factor. And this procedure is no different. While complications from arthroscopy are uncommon, they can happen – and one of those complications is the formation of potentially lethal blood clots.

 

Nicholas DiNubile, a spokesman for the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, says that patient demand makes the banning of the procedure difficult. “You have this baby boomer population driving a lot of this. They really think that they can turn the clocks back and surgery can fix everything,” he said.

 

Of course, the surgeons aren’t discouraging the practice, either. That’s how they make their money! You should hardly be surprised that doctors these days like to start slicing people open and poking around inside of them as a first rather than last resort. Orthopedic surgeons are especially likely to “pop the hood” of their patients as if they’re just going in to do a tune up.

 

If you have osteoarthritis of the knee, I’m hoping you’ll take this study to heart (or joint, as the case may be) and look for an alternative before you let them put you under the knife.

This is the second study that I have read about that compared the outcomes of real arthroscopic surgery to a sham procedure where there was not a difference in outcomes. Nick

 

And thanks to my son Aaron (http://www.binauralairwaves.com) for creating a blog site:http://integrativeenergetics.blogspot.com

Kidney Stones

by Nick Soloway

Go with the flow

by Dr. Jonathan Wright

Q: I’ve been having trouble urinating. My urologist says it’s most likely caused by prostate enlargement, but since I don’t have any other symptoms yet, he prescribed a drug just to help me with urination. I’d prefer a natural approach, though, if there is one.

 

Dr. Wright: The medication your urologist likely prescribed is called isosorbide dinatrate, which is a synthetic formulation that works by improving the production of nitric oxide, a substance that relaxes vascular and other smooth muscles. But there’s no need to use a space alien molecule when there’s a natural substance that does the exact same thing. It’s an amino acid called L-arginine.

 

I’ve written about L-arginine many times over the past few years. Admittedly, one of its more “attention- getting” benefits is that it improves erectile dysfunction (ED). But it’s also useful for all sorts of vascular diseases since it dilates blood vessels and improves blood flow.

 

There are two types of L-arginine — “time release” and “regular.” Time-release is preferable for urinary problems because, although it has a lower peak, it lasts longer. For men having difficulty urinating, I generally recommend taking 3 g of L-arginine daily in addition to other nutrients and botanicals that help improve prostate health (such as zinc, essential fatty acids, and lycopene).

 

You can find regular L-arginine at most natural food stores. And you can get it at: emersonecologics.com

 

 

Eating late makes esophageal reflux worse

Thirty patients with gastroesophageal reflux (GERD) symptoms were randomly assigned to consume a standard meal either six hours or two hours prior to going to bed. The next night they consumed the same meal at the alternate time. The meal contained 900 kcal and consisted of a McDonald’s Big Mac, French fries, and 600 ml of a carbonated soft drink. Acid exposure was measured for 48 hours using a Bravo wireless pH system. The mean amount of supine acid reflux was significantly greater after the late evening meal than after the earlier evening meal (p = 0.002). There was no significant difference in total symptom score between the two days.

 

Comment by Dr. Alan Gaby: The results of this study indicate that, if you have GERD and plan to eat a large junk-food meal, you probably should eat it far away from bedtime. It is noteworthy that the researchers considered a large hamburger, fried potatoes, and a glass of sugar-water infused with carbon dioxide a “standard meal.” Maybe if patients with GERD raised their standards, they wouldn’t have GERD anymore. Nevertheless, it seems logical that reflux would be less likely to occur if dinner were given ample time to enter the small intestine prior to lying down for the night.

 

Piesman M, et al. Nocturnal reflux episodes following the administration of a standardized meal. Does timing matter? Am J Gastroenterol. 2007;102:2128-2134.

 

Cut your risk of kidney stones down to (almost) nothing—no prescription required by Dr. Jonathan Wright

 

I’m no longer amazed by the advice given today by “mainstream” medical doctors on preventing the most common type of kidney stones (the calcium oxalate variety)––but I am still disappointed. Some doctors say to cut back on dietary and supplemental calcium, even more counsel their patients to reduce calcium and salt and to drink lots more water. A few even give prescriptions for diuretics. None of this is necessary (or helpful for that matter). Yet the mainstream seems to be turning a blind eye to methods clearly proven to help.

 

In 1974, two Harvard researchers found that magnesium oxide (300 milligrams daily) and vitamin B6 (10 milligrams daily) could reduce the risk of recurrent calcium oxalate stones by 92.3 percent.1 Their research was published in the Journal of Urology.

Harvard? Journal of Urology? What more could a urologist ask for when it comes to research? I gave copies of the article to individuals I worked with to give to their urologists, but nothing changed. The recommendations for low calcium diets just kept on coming.

 

In 1991, the British Journal of Urology published another prevention study. During a five-year investigation, researchers determined that the use of 10 grams (less than 1 tablespoon) of rice bran twice daily after meals reduced new calcium oxalate kidney stone formation by 83.4 percent.2 To this day, not one person I’ve asked has been told by his or her urologist about this harmless treatment.

 

As I said earlier, this just doesn’t surprise me anymore. After all, it took the physicians at the British Admiralty over 150 years to implement one of the earliest successful scientific experiments concerning the beneficial effects of nutrition on illness—the prevention of scurvy with citrus fruit. And it took 19th century medicine more than 50 years to eliminate “childbirth fever” by simply having physicians wash their hands. Modern medicine still hasn’t learned that good nutrition can prevent nearly 100 percent of toxemia of pregnancy. I could go on, but you get the idea.

 

But back to kidney stones: The same amounts of magnesium and vitamin B6 found effective in preventing calcium oxalate kidney stones back in 1974 can be found in many high-quality multiple vitamin-mineral formulations today. To get enough magnesium and vitamin B6 from a “muliple,” be sure to take the four to six capsules daily that are usually called for by the labels of these products. Add 2 or 3 teaspoons of rice bran twice daily, and your chances of a calcium oxalate kidney stone recurrence are close to zero.

 

Orange Juice Consumption May Reduce Risk of Kidney Stone Formation

 

KIDNEY STONES, NEPHROLITHIASIS – Orange Juice, Lemonade, Calcium Oxalate, Uric Acid

“Comparative Value of Orange Juice versus Lemonade in Reducing Stone-Forming Risk,” Odvina CV, Clin J Am Soc of Nephrology, August 2006; [Epub ahead of print]. (Address: Charles and Jane Pak Center for Mineral Metabolism and Clinical Research and Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas, USA.

E-Mail: clarita.odvina@utsouthwestern.edu

 

In a randomized, crossover study involving 9 healthy subjects and 4 stone formers, the author suggests that “short-term orange juice consumption could result in biochemical modification of stone risk factors.” While on a constant metabolic diet, the subjects were randomized to receive distilled water, orange juice or lemonade daily for 1 week, in a crossover design. After each intervention, urinary samples were collected for acid-base parameters and stone risk analysis. While urinary calcium levels did not significantly differ between interventions, urinary oxalate was higher, and uric acid was lower during the orange juice intervention, compared to the lemonade and distilled water interventions. Additionally, calculated supersaturation of calcium oxalate was lower in the orange juice phase, compared to the distilled water phase. Despite the fact that lemonade and orange juice had comparable citrate content, orange juice demonstrated greater alkalinizing and citraturic effects than lemonade. Thus, this study suggests that the consumption of orange juice may exert a protective effect against kidney stone formation. These results warrant further studies.