Alzheimer’s
by
Raymond Francis
Ronald Reagan died of a
tragic disease called Alzheimer’s. Alzheimer’s progressively damages brain
cells leading to impaired memory, thinking and behavior. A tragic, costly and
growing disease among our elderly, Alzheimer’s is now affecting younger people
in their 30s, 40s and 50s. It is time to think about how to prevent and
mitigate Alzheimer’s.
In my book Never Be Sick Again, I related how Dr.
Morton Walker questioned members of a long-lived native population about
dementia. These healthy people typically lived well into their hundreds; yet
they had no knowledge of dementia. They
had never experienced anything like dementia and, therefore, did not have a
word in their language to describe it. These people lived nearly half a
century longer than we do, yet we are told that Alzheimer’s is a disease of
aging and the price we must pay for living so long.
Alzheimer’s is no
different than other chronic diseases. It is something we have created with our
modern diets and lifestyles. Since we created it, we can uncreate it. Like any
so-called disease, Alzheimer’s is nothing more than malfunctioning cells. The
questions to ask are these: Why are these brain cells malfunctioning, and what
can be done to prevent and reverse it? Here are some of the factors to
consider:
Recent research,
including a study in a 2004 Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, has determined that Alzheimer’s
results from free radical activity in the brain, which produces “a
neurodegenerative cascade that leads to clinical disease.” Free radicals play a role in virtually every disease. They damage DNA
and cellular machinery, causing cellular malfunction. So, where are these free
radicals coming from? Alzheimer’s is characterized by the formation of
beta-amyloid peptides around brain cells. Beta-amyloid is the protein fragment
considered by many experts to be the prime suspect triggering nerve cell
degeneration in Alzheimer's patients. Research shows that when beta-amyloid
peptides accumulate, they cause high levels of destructive free-radical
activity.
If beta-amyloid
peptide accumulation creates damaging free radicals, it would be useful to understand
how this comes about so we can prevent it. A study in the May 2003 Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences offers one explanation that has to do with the deadly metabolic
poison known as sugar. Sugar causes
every imaginable disease, including Alzheimer’s. Eating sugar increases blood
sugar levels, causing an increase in blood insulin. The enzyme insulysin degrades insulin so as to
restore normal insulin levels. However, this same enzyme also degrades
beta-amyloid peptides in the brain. The researchers believe that regular sugar
consumption creates chronically high insulin levels. High insulin uses up too
much of the available insulysin capacity, thereby preventing the normal
degradation of amyloid peptides. This leads to an accumulation of beta-amyloid
peptides in the brain—resulting in Alzheimer’s. President Reagan was well known
for his high consumption of sugar in the form of jellybeans. There is even
another mechanism at work. The body’s reaction to high blood sugar results in
low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), and hypoglycemia makes the brain substantially
more susceptible to damage from toxins.
High homocysteine
levels generate brain-damaging free radicals. According to a study in a
February 2002 New England Journal of
Medicine, people with high levels of homocysteine have double the risk of Alzheimer’s compared to those with normal
homocysteine. People who are deficient in vitamins B6, B12 and folic acid often
develop high homocysteine. In a March 1997 study in the Journal of Gerontology and Biological Sciences, Alzheimer’s
patients were found to be deficient in both vitamin B12 and folate when
compared to age-matched controls. In
fact, supplemental B12 has been shown to completely reverse memory loss in some
older people. About 15 percent of the population has a gene that puts them at
high risk for dementia when deficient in B12. Supplementation with B12 will
both prevent and reverse this dementia. B vitamins are critical to controlling
homocysteine and B vitamins are depleted by eating sugar, the major component
of jellybeans.
Magnesium deficiency
plays a vital role in the development of neurological diseases. This is because
magnesium deficiency not only encourages the production of free radicals; it
also magnifies the extent of the damage. Low magnesium levels have been shown
to double the amount of free radical activity in the body. Most Americans are
deficient in magnesium and eating sugar, the major component of jellybeans,
depletes magnesium.
Food additives in the
form of flavor enhancers such as MSG, artificial sweeteners such as aspartame,
artificial colors, and artificial flavors all damage brain cells and contribute
to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s. These dangerous neurotoxins are
found in all manner of processed foods including breakfast cereals, sodas and
jelly beans.
Another apparent
contributor to Alzheimer’s is aluminum. A study by the University of California
focused on a region in northwestern Italy that is known to have a high concentration
of aluminum in its drinking water. In fact, some of this water contains six
times the maximum amount of aluminum recommended by most environmental
agencies. The study concluded that this region of Italy had an above average
death rate from Alzheimer’s, and that
even minute amounts of aluminum accelerate cellular death.
Almost all municipal
water supplies in the United States contain aluminum, not to mention toothpaste
tubes, aluminum cookware, and food and beverages packaged in aluminum including
fruit juices, beer and sodas. Adding fluoride to our drinking water and
toothpaste compounds the problem. Fluoride, a dangerous toxin in its own right,
is known to enhance the absorption of aluminum by reacting with it to form
aluminum fluoride, a powerful neurotoxin that is easily transported into the
brain. Combining aluminum, fluoride and aspartame in a soda creates an
enormously powerful mixture of brain toxins. Unfortunately, numerous processed
foods including soups, breakfast cereals and jellybeans are made using tap
water containing aluminum fluoride.
Mercury produces free
radicals and poses a particular risk. A study in the April 2001 issue of the
British journal NeuroReport stated:
"Seven of the characteristic markers that we look for to distinguish
Alzheimer's disease can be produced in normal brain tissues...by the addition
of extremely low levels of mercury.” Alzheimer’s patients are known to have
higher than average mercury levels, and
the American people have 557 tons of mercury in their dental fillings! Even
the mercury contained in vaccines contributes; having a flu shot five years in a row will increase your risk of
Alzheimer’s by 1000 percent.
High cholesterol is a
risk factor. High cholesterol increases the level of certain proteins that are
abnormally processed by people with Alzheimer’s. This sets off a chain reaction
resulting in forming beta-amyloid peptides. Sugar consumption increases
cholesterol.
Another risk factor
for Alzheimer’s is the now highly discredited hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
for women. A May 2003 Journal of the
American Medical Association reported that HRT doubles the risk of Alzheimer’s
disease. “No one anticipated this outcome,” said Dr. Marilyn Albert,
a professor of neurobiology at Johns Hopkins. This news was just the latest
from a series of studies finding that the supposed benefits of HRT
do not exist and that HRT
increases the risk of serious diseases—including those it was supposed to
prevent! Because of HRT,
millions of women are at risk for everything from cancer to heart disease to
Alzheimer’s (another of modern medicine’s epic blunders).
Other sources of
brain-damaging free radicals include fluoride in toothpaste, recreational drugs
such as marijuana, pesticides and herbicides, all of which are capable of doing
permanent brain damage. As you can see, much is known about the risk factors
that contribute to Alzheimer’s. However, we also know a lot about how certain
substances can slow its progression and improve function in patients. Knowing
what we know now, we can prevent almost all cases of Alzheimer’s as well as
slowing and even reversing its development in those already afflicted. All that
is necessary is to put this knowledge to work.
Since Alzheimer’s
results from free radical damage to the brain, the need to supply the body with
antioxidant nutrients such as vitamins C and E is obvious. There is
overwhelming evidence that antioxidants are highly protective in both prevention
and treatment of Alzheimer’s. In a recent animal experiment vitamin E was found
to prevent beta-amyloid peptides from killing brain cells.
To prevent or
mitigate Alzheimer’s, start your own program now. Begin with a good diet.
First, get the Big Four out of your
life: sugar, white flour, processed oils and milk. These products are huge
contributors to our epidemic of chronic and degenerative disease. Eat at least
nine half-cup servings of fresh, organic fruit and vegetables every day. Avoid
all processed and fast foods. Avoid coffee, carbonated drinks, snack foods, and
french fries. Eliminate supermarket oils from your kitchen. Supplement with
omega-3 fats; people with the highest intake of fish oil have 70 percent lower
risk of developing Alzheimer’s.
Beyond eating right,
supplementing with high quality Beyond Health-approved
nutrients is essential. Vitamins A, C, D, E, K, carotenes, quercitin, lipoic
acid, CoQ10, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, acetyl-L-carnitine, phosphatidylserine, glycerophosphocholine,
plus magnesium and manganese are all highly protective. The latest research
points to quercitin as a potent protector of brain cells. Vitamin B complex
including B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B12 and folic acid is a must; new research shows
that people with the highest intake of B3 have 80 percent lower risk. Adding
the herb ginkgo biloba to the above is also recommended. Recent studies have
shown ginkgo to be just as effective as prescription drugs in treating
Alzheimer’s and, of course, without the side effects. All this may sound like a
lot, but many of these nutrients come together in one pill. Consult with Beyond
Health to get what you need.
Exercising your brain
is important as well. If you don’t use it, you lose it. Read about new things,
do crossword puzzles, play chess, learn new skills, and keep socially engaged.
Regular saunas are helpful to reduce toxic load. Regular exercise has been
found to be good for brain function. Exercise for at least 30 minutes daily and
definitely include rebounding in your regimen. Everyone needs to be rebounding!
We
can and must stop this unnecessary epidemic of Alzheimer’s. To prevent and
arrest Alzheimer’s, one of the most important things anyone can do is stop
eating sugar—an incredibly dangerous poison. Then get the mercury, fluoride,
aluminum and all processed foods and oils out of your life. The combination of
good food and supplemental omega-3 fats, B vitamins, magnesium and vitamins C
and E will give you enormous protection from this dreaded and debilitating
disease. Call Beyond Health
to get on a good program.
Raymond
Francis, N.D. is an M.I.T.-trained scientist, a registered
nutrition consultant, author of Never
Be Sick Again, host of the Beyond Health Show and an
internationally recognized leader in the emerging field of optimal health
maintenance.
Reprinted with permission from:
Beyond HealthÒ News
email: mail@beyondhealth.com
Copyright 2005, Beyond Health