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Enzymes, which serve as the
body's labor force to perform every single function for our
daily activities, are required to keep us alive. They are
responsible for all of the functions of every organ system in
the body. At the same time, they are most important in
supporting the body's defenses and immune system to protect us
from harmful forces and specific dangers to our health.
There are three classes of enzymes: metabolic enzymes, which run
every process in the body; digestive enzymes, which help digest
or foods; and food enzymes from raw foods, which start food
digestion. All of our organs and tissues are run by
metabolic enzymes. Since good health depends on all of the
metabolic enzymes doing an excellent job, we must be sure that
nothing interferes with the body making enough of them. A
shortage could cause serious trouble.
The length of life is inversely
proportional to the rate of exhaustion of the enzyme potential
of an organism. The increased use of food enzymes promotes
a decreased rate of exhaustion of the enzyme potential.
(The Enzyme Nutrition Axiom - Dr. Edward Howell)
Enzymes are minute protein
molecules that are found naturally in foods we eat.1
These protein molecules serve a vital purpose. They are
catalysts that make possible the chemical reactions that digest
our food and break it down to useable, absorbable nutrients.
Enzymes are the life force that is found in foods and then
transferred to our bodies to keep every system functioning
optimally.
Problems arise because most of
the foods we eat are enzyme-deficient. Enzymes are destroyed at
temperatures of 118°F and above.2 That means that
almost any kind of food preparation method destroys enzymes.
Anytime you cook, microwave, fry, bake, grill or otherwise
process your foods, you subject yourself to the dangerous
consequences of eating enzyme-deficient foods. How bad is
that really, and just what happens when you eat foods that are
devoid of enzymes?
Mother Nature must have known we
wouldn’t eat all of our foods raw, so our bodies do have a
backup supply of digestive enzymes to draw from. However, that
supply is limited and depleting this supply places undue stress
on the body. In other words, whenever we eat cooked or processed
foods (which for most people is every meal!), we cause our
bodies to work harder than necessary.3
When the body’s resources are
being commandeered to accomplish digestion, they aren’t
readily available to do other things—such as warding off
disease or delaying the aging process or burning stored body
fat. That’s right. Eating cooked and processed foods can lead
to frequent sickness, premature aging and increased storage of
body fat and countless other problems.4
Cooked and processed foods are
so hard on the body that they actually bring on a condition
called digestive leucocytosis. The body considers cooked food to
be a foreign substance, an unwanted invader and eating cooked
food causes the white blood cell count to rise just as it does
when the body is sick or has ingested poison!5
Further, if enzymes are not
present in the food you eat, not only is the body overtaxed, but
also food is often only partially digested. This causes
additional problems, including allergies, lethargy and deadly
plaque build-up in the blood vessels.
Eventually, as your body’s
stores of digestive enzymes are depleted, you become unable to
digest certain foods at all. For example, if you were to use up
your supply of lactase enzymes (from eating enzyme-deficient
milk products) you would become lactose intolerant.
All the while that we are
inordinately using up our digestive enzymes by eating
enzyme-deficient foods, the body is trying to compensate in yet
another way—by next pulling from its supply of metabolic
enzymes. These enzymes can be called upon to facilitate
digestion, but their primary purpose is to run other processes
of the body.
Plainly, it is not a good thing
to be using enzymes to accomplish digestion when they are
supposed to be regulating the heart, lungs, or kidneys instead.
However, that is exactly what happens. The body places a
priority on digestion and goes to great lengths to do whatever
is necessary to make sure foods are properly broken down and
assimilated.
Some experts recognize the
extreme toll this places on the body. They believe that enzyme
deficiency is a factor in all disease and even determines
lifespan. Dr. Edward Howell, who studied enzyme nutrition for
over 50 years, wrote:
"Humans eating an
enzymeless diet use up a tremendous amount of their enzyme
potential in lavish secretions of the pancreas and other
digestive organs. The result is a shortened lifespan (65 years
of less as compared with 100 or more), illness, and lowered
resistance to stresses of all types, physiological and
environmental."6
Initially, the body may react to
enzyme deficiency with what we call “indigestion.” Minor
discomforts—of burping, heartburn, abdominal pain and bad
breath as well as excess gas, skin problems, diarrhea,
constipation and more—can be linked to consuming foods that
are devoid of enzymes. Headaches, mental fatigue, nervousness,
lack of concentration, memory loss, insomnia and nightmares can
all result when the body doesn’t have enzymes readily
available in the foods we eat. A lack of enzymes also interferes
with hormone production, inhibits cellular repair and causes
chronic digestive problems. (These types of problems are common!
One in thirteen hospitalizations are a result of chronic
digestive disorders.)7
There is an ironic twist in this
whole scenario. Most people, when they experience the first
signs of indigestion, have no idea that those signs are tied to
enzyme deficiency and are a signal that digestion is compromised. Rather than looking for a way to promote digestion
and make sure the burden is taken off the body, most people who
experience indigestion further interfere with the process by
taking antacids or acid blockers, which stop the digestive
process in its tracks.8 While this may dissuade the
symptoms, it doesn’t solve the problem, and is detrimental to
overall health and well being.
The need for restoring the
body’s enzyme supply is unquestionable. Taking supplemental
enzymes like those found in The Greatest Vitamin in the World
preserves the body’s own vital enzyme stores. Many people who
take The Greatest Vitamin in the World notice they aren’t
lethargic or sleepy after a meal, the discomfort of indigestion
is gone and—for many—food allergies disappear. Enzyme
supplementation has been shown to alleviate mild, and even
severe or chronic, digestive disorders. Many people—who may
not have noticeable digestive problems but who understand the
benefits of enzymes—say they take enzyme supplements as a way
to ward off the aging process, boost the immune system and
protect themselves from the incredible toll cooked and processed
foods can place on the body.
Obviously, in today’s world,
it is virtually impossible to eat a diet of only raw foods; and,
if you—or any other individual who has lived on the typical
North American diet—were even to start doing that today you
still need a way to restore the enzymes that have been depleted
to this point if you are to experience optimal health.
Along with changing your diet
and adding more raw foods, the way to preserve the body’s
vital enzyme supply is by taking an enzyme supplement each time
you eat foods that are cooked or processed. In recent years, as
more and more people become aware of the need for enzymes, many
products have cropped up on the market. While some have value,
many others are incomplete, and thus, ineffective.
In order to promote complete
digestion, an enzyme supplement must contain the full complex of
enzymes available in The Greatest Vitamin in the World.
Pineapple enzymes or papaya enzymes are single plant enzyme
products and are devoid of the enzymes needed to completely
digest food. Likewise, products that contain protease only
initiate the process of protein digestion. Protease breaks
protein down to a peptide. In the peptide form, protein can’t
be used by the body and can actually cause more harm than good.
To break peptides down to useable amino acids requires peptidase
as well.
Amylase will break carbohydrates
down into disaccharides. Since disaccharides are still not in a
form the body can use—and, like peptides, can wreak havoc in
the system—cellulase, lactase, maltase and invertase must also
be included to finish the job and break the carbohydrates all
the way down to useable simple sugars.9
Similarly, lipase, the enzyme
that digests fat must have certain minerals present in order to
accomplish its job.10
Many products on the market
contain animal enzymes, such as pepsin. While animal enzymes
may, indeed, promote digestion, they have a limited pH range.
This limited range means that they work in only one stage of the
three-stage process of digestion. In addition, animal enzymes
don’t work in conjunction with the natural processes of the
body. Rather than restoring the body’s enzyme supply and
allowing it to function at optimal levels, animal enzymes
supplant (or take the place of) this supply and cause the body
to stop producing enzymes of its own.
Taking the enzyme supplement
found in The Greatest Vitamin in the World helps the body
in yet another way. Not only does a complete, pure plant enzyme
supplement help break foods down, enzymes also assist with the
absorption and delivery of vitamins and minerals, making these
nutrients readily available for use in the body.
You now understand the dangers
of enzyme depletion and how to avoid the side effects of eating
cooked and processed foods. Choose to be free of indigestion and
chronic digestive problems, to preserve your enzyme stores for
important metabolic function and to promote optimum nutrient
absorption and fat metabolism by eating responsibly. When
you eat foods that are cooked and processed and, therefore, void
of enzymes, make sure you don’t let enzyme deficiencies
overtax your system and deprive you of the optimal health you
want and deserve. Avoid the many health hazards associated with
enzyme deficiency, such as lactose intolerance and inability to
digest milk products, fat intolerance and the resulting dangers
of heart disease, sugar intolerance and the precursory steps to
diabetes, and the ravages of lethargy, food allergies and
toxicity that can result from undigested food particles.
Promote optimal health by taking
the enzymes in The Greatest Vitamin in the World each
time you eat a snack or a meal that contains foods that are
cooked or processed.
This article courtesy of John Trout - www.vitamin4body.com
1. Howell, Dr.
Edward. Enzyme Nutrition. New Jersey: Avery Publishing Group,
1985, p. 2.
2. Ibid., p. 4.
3. Ibid., p. 6-7.
4. Ibid., p. 15-6.
5. Kautchakoff, Paul, M.D. “The Influence of Food Cooking on
the Blood Formula of Man,” Lausanne, Switzerland, 1930.
6. Howell, op. cit.
7. National Digestive Disease Information Clearinghouse http://www.niddk.nih.gov/DD-statistics/DD-statistics.html
8. Garrett, Laurie. The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases
in a World out of Balance. New York: Penguin Books, 1994.
9. Gray, Gary M. “Intestinal Digestion and Maldigestion of
Dietary Carbohydrates.” Annual Review of Medicine 22:391-404,
1971.
10. McPherson, James C., et al. “Effect of lipase ingestion on
blood lipid levels.” Proceedings of the Society of
Experimental Biology and Medicine 115: 5124-17 (1964). |