Did You Know Just That Many Cancers Are Linked To
A Vitamin Deficiency?
WHY
TAKE VITAMINS?
by Elmer M. Cranton, M.D.
Nutritional
supplements have their greatest benefit by preserving health
and preventing future illness. This is accomplished with
a wide spectrum of vitamins, minerals, trace elements and
antioxidants that, in combination, provide optimum levels
for long life and to slow the aging process. An immediate
improvement is usually not noticed unless there already
exists a significant deficiency, far below optimal levels.
Levels
of micronutrients necessary to prevent overt diseases of
deficiency, such as scurvy (vitamin C), pellagra (niacin)
and beri beri (thiamin), are far below levels necessary
for optimum health and to slow the over all aging process.
It is extremely difficult and perhaps even impossible to
achieve optimum intakes without using nutritional supplements.
Higher levels of nutrients strengthen the immune system
and prevent infections. Antioxidants combined with a full
spectrum of vitamins and minerals, formulated in scientifically
balanced proportions, protect cells in the body from damage
by free radical oxidation when the body's fuel is burned
with oxygen for chemical energy and repair. Heart attacks,
strokes, cancer, arthritis and other age-associated diseases
can thus be prevented or greatly delayed in their onset.
Recently
published research from the University of California shows
that by merely taking a simple daily multiple vitamin supplement,
with generous amounts of vitamin C, average life span increases
by 6 years. A World Health Organization study in Europe
has shown that low blood levels of vitamin E correlate far
better with death from heart attack than do high levels
of cholesterol. In fact, cholesterol is very beneficial
to the body unless oxygen radicals in the metabolic process
first damage it. The whole anti-cholesterol campaign is
largely a false issue. Vitamin E and other antioxidants
protect cholesterol from free radical damage and maintain
its healthy state. Other research in the United States has
also shown that vitamin E acts to reduce heart attacks.
Recent
reports show that sudden rupture from inflammation, and
not large plaque-blockages, are the main cause of heart
attacks. The internal surfaces of blood vessel become diffusely
abnormal with age. Sudden symptoms from atherosclerosis
result principally from a systemic inflammatory disease,
a wide-spread but minimally intrusive process. This can
cause a sudden, internal rupture of a blood vessel wall,
blocking a location that would previously appear quite normal
on angiogram. That is why elevated laboratory tests for
inflammation, such as CRP (C-reactive protein), correlate
so well with heart problems. Inflammation is a free-radical
mediated process. The body's primary anti-inflammatory defenses
require a large number of vitamins, minerals and antioxidants.
The statin, cholesterol-lowering drugs work in a similar
fashion, but with the added risk of many associated side
effects and toxicity. The reduction in heart disease seen
with cholesterol lowering drugs has little to do with cholesterol.
They have an anti-inflammatory effect on body tissues, quite
similar to the action of nutritional supplements—but with
risk of toxicity, greater cost and only partial benefit.
Forty
or more vitamins, minerals and other metabolic co-factors
are utilized in a cascade of interlocking steps to preserve
health and prevent illness. They must all be present in
the body in optimal amounts for proper function. For example,
neutralizing a free radical inactivates vitamin E. It is
immediately restored to its active state by vitamin C, which
in turn is inactivated. Vitamin C is then reactivated by
glutathione that relies on a further cascade of another
40 micronutrients in succession to completely convert the
damaging effects of free radicals to useful energy. Beta-carotene
and coenzyme Q10 are also necessary. If one link in that
chain is missing or deficient, benefit from the entire process
is reduced. It is therefore important to insure optimum
intake of the whole group.
If
one trace element is taken in excess of its proper metabolic
ratio to another trace element, it can block uptake of something
else, causing an artificial deficiency. For example, zinc
in excess can block the uptake of copper, causing a copper
deficiency. Zinc without selenium can cause a relative deficiency
of selenium. Almost all minerals and trace elements interact
in this way, as do some of the vitamins and antioxidants.
Multiple supplements must be scientifically formulated and
balanced in the ratios of all ingredients to be of most
benefit.
Iron
is an exception. For most people, unless a proven deficiency
is shown by blood testing, consumption of iron in supplements
can be very harmful and greatly speeds the onset of cancer,
atherosclerosis and other free radical related diseases.
Readers
interested in more details on this may want to read my book,
Bypassing Bypass Surgery.
It
is possible for healthy individuals to obtain insurance
amounts of most micronutrients in a very cost effective
way by using a nutritional supplement called Dr. Cranton's
PrimeNutrientsTM has insurance amounts of more than 40 nutrients
and antioxidants, all in the proper metabolic ratio and
without iron. By taking three tablets twice daily with meals
(or two tablets with three meals), a bottle costing less
than $20.00 will last a full month.
Older
people and patients with established degenerative diseases
of aging, such as heart disease, should take additional
vitamins C, E, coenzyme Q10 and amino acids such as glutathione.
Convenient twice-daily packets containing all of those ingredients
are available in a product called Dr. Cranton's AntioxPacketsTM.
Because of the additional ingredients, however, AntioxPacketsTM
costs more than PrimeNutrientsTM. Combined with proper diet
and life-style factors, Dr. Cranton's AntioxPacketsTM twice
daily, with meals, may actually reverse established disease.
http://drcranton.com/nutrition/vitamins.htm