Research
If you are currently using or plan to use a food
supplement, why not use one that will actually provide
your body with the nutritional help that it needs. You
may use any nutritional supplement from the shelf but
why not use health supplements with vitamins and
minerals that will really give you value for money.
Several nutritional supplements on the market do not
provide much, if any, nutrition at all while few
companies produce true food supplements.
Vitamins, as found in nature, are groups of chemically
related compounds. Science identifies part of this
compound as the organic nutrient. In the case of Vitamin
C the organic nutrient is ascorbic acid. These are the
parts that science feels are the workhorses and thus the
essence of the vitamin.
The conclusion then, if
these can be reproduced and supplied to the patient, all
that is needed has been provided.
The problem is
that this thinking does not take into consideration all
of the enzymes, co-enzymes, trace elements, activators
and numerous other naturally occurring synergistic
micronutrients that we may or may not know about at this
time, by which the organic nutrient is rendered usable
by the body.
As one researcher has put it, to
take the organic nutrient alone is tantamount to
consuming a banana peel without the banana and thinking
one has consumed nutrition. Whether or not this view of
the role the organic nutrients play is entirely
accurate, the principle of wholeness stands: leave out
part of the watch, and you cannot keep time.
Types of food supplements
There are 3 types of
supplements:
Food Supplements
As the name
implies this supplement is taken directly from a food
source. The word natural truly applies, as these are
vitamins, co-factors, enzymes and other synergistic
micronutrients taken from a raw food. The only thing
removed from the food is moisture and fiber – nothing is
added or extracted that can destroy or change the
molecular, biological or biochemical combinations or
actions.
Fractionated vitamins (crystalline)
This type of product has a food as its original
source (and is therefore not considered a synthetic
vitamin) but the extraction process has eliminated all
of the synergistic co-factors, leaving only the pure
organic nutrient. The motivation behind this is to
concentrate the organic nutrient and thus increase the
milligram levels for marketing purposes. These types of
vitamin are also referred to as crystalline in that they
are but a portion of the complete and original complex
from which they are derived. The problem with this type
of vitamin is that they are only of value to the body if
all the associated synergistic micronutrients are
intact, which make it bioavailable to the cells of the
body.
Synthetic vitamins (not a food supplement)
Here the organic nutrient (sometimes called the
crystalline vitamin molecule) is constructed or
synthesized primarily from corn sugar and non-food
compounds such as coal tar. While the exact molecular
formula of the organic nutrient is replicated there are
at least 2 problems with this type of vitamin:
These synthetic products contain absolutely none of the
co-factors, trace elements, enzymes etc. that are vital
for the body to effectively utilize the vitamin. Without
the necessary micronutrients required to make the
vitamin bioavailable, these synthetic vitamins will be
of no value to the body. You may be thinking that the
body is capable of supplementing these nutrients from
its own reserves but the body is already deficient –
where would it obtain these synergists from? Even if it
could, there is a second concern.
When these
vitamins are synthesized under laboratory conditions,
the vitamin is actually a mirror image of its natural
counterpart and this therefore leaves the synthetic
vitamin having a problem with spin. In other words the
natural molecules have a right hand spin whereas the
synthetic vitamin has a left hand spin. Unfortunately,
for some reason, the proper rotation cannot be mastered
in the laboratory. This is significant in that the
attachment sites for the synergistic micronutrients are
not available. Gilbert Levin, Ph.D., has the following
to say on the subject: “Because its structure is
reversed, a left-handed molecule cannot take part in
chemical reactions meant for a right-handed molecule any
more than a left hand can fit into a right-handed glove.
It’s odd geometry would prevent it from being
metabolized by the body.
A key factor to keep in
mind when it comes to vitamin supplementation is that of
bioavailability i.e. how available and useable is the
vitamin to the body. Consuming fractionated vitamins or
synthetic vitamins where the co-factors are not present
or the spin is incorrect is paramount to handing someone
a steering wheel of a car and telling them they are now
the owner of a car able to transport them to wherever
they want to go – it’s absurd!
How do these
synthetic/fractionated vitamins work?
Without
going into too much detail (as this is a topic of
discussion all on its own) there are two possibilities
why one will feel better when taking a “health product”.
Provides some semblance of nutrition
This
applies mainly to the crystalline form of vitamins as it
is these that contain some residual, minute quantities
of the co-factors and they also have the right hand
spin. Now if the body is nutritionally deficient and is
handed this poor excuse for nutrition, out of
desperation the body will respond by doing whatever
healing it can with the elements provided. As low as it
may be this is probably the most nutrition the body will
have received in years. Thus for the first weeks, or
even months (depending on how the person felt), the
person will experience improvements, but given time,
their health problems begin to return. Most people find
that over time they need to take larger quantities of
the vitamins to maintain the same level of well-being.
This is a clear indication that the nutritional
deficiency is not being adequately dealt with by the
vitamin supplement.
Causes a stimulatory reaction
in the body
This is a complicated matter but
simply put these vitamins may exert some stimulatory
effect on the adrenal glands causing a feeling of
euphoria (due to excess functioning of the adrenal
glands). The consumer naturally interprets this as a
healing response but this same feeling can be achieved
by introducing coffee into their diet (perhaps a safer
option).
Ineffective, if not harmful
With
foods and food concentrates – containing whole
nutritional complexes – the body can choose its needs
for assimilation and excrete what it does not need. This
is called ‘selective absorption’. However, with
fractionated or synthetic vitamins, there is no choice –
the body must handle the chemical in some manner and can
suffer consequences of biochemical imbalances and toxic
overdose.
The following are just a few (of many)
references and citings on this subject that may make you
think twice when choosing a vitamin supplement in the
future (the Journal’s publishing these articles are
considered highly reputable)
A 10-year Finnish
study done on 29,133 male smokers was done to determine
if vitamin E and beta-carotene would reduce the
incidence of lung cancer and other cancers. The daily
dose of beta-carotene was 20mg and that of
alpha-tocopherol was 50mg – both were in synthetic form.
The researchers were astonished to find that, not only
was there no protection noted from the supplementation,
but there were noted harmful effects, which included:
18% higher incidence of lung cancer, more heart attacks,
more strokes, and an 8% increase in the overall death
rate. New England Journal of Medicine (Volume 330,
Number 13), April 14, 1994.
Agnes Fay Morgan,
Ph.D., food research scientist at the University of
California, reported in Science, 93, pages 261-262, that
animals on a synthetic vitamin enriched diet died long
before animals on an unprocessed diet became disabled.
She further stated that the enrichment of processed
foods with synthetic vitamins may “precipitate
conditions worse than the original deficiency”.
Synthetic multivitamins, given to elderly Americans
(average age 63) as a supplement, for the purpose of
improving muscle weakness and physical frailty,
demonstrated no benefits to the participants. New
England Journal of Medicine, June 23, 1994.
Read the articles on Real Vitamins and Real Minerals
by
Dr Robert Thiel and by
Michael Teplitsky (shorter).
[If you would
like to know more on real vitamins there is a great book
discussing natural vs. synthetic supplementation in more
detail: The Real Truth About Vitamin and Antioxidants,
by Judith A. DeCava.]
Camdeboo Health Products provide you with REAL
FOOD SUPPLEMENTS from a natural food source. Several
products contain powdered sprouts and/or flax. Other
products are produced from unique plants (nature) with
specific qualities related to the prevention of or
curing of various ailments and conditions.