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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

The Awful Truth About Eating Grains

Written by Dr. Del Thiessen and sent by Barbara Kravets

At the University of Minnesota, epidemiologist David R. Jacobs has found that those who ate whole-grain products daily had about a 15 percent to 25 percent reduction in death from all causes, including heart disease and cancer (The Washington Post: 8-4-99). This finding is in keeping with guidelines by the American Heart Association, the American Cancer Society, the National Institutes of Health, and the American Society for Clinical Nutrition, who would all like to see an increased consumption of whole-grain foods to at least three servings per day.
Current dietary guidelines recommend that consumers eat six to 11 servings of grain products daily, including at least three whole-grain foods. A draft of health goals published by the Department of Health and Human Services calls for 75 percent of Americans to meet this intake by the year 2010. The fact is that most Americans fall short of those goals, with only 7 percent eating three or more whole-grain foods daily, according to the latest U.S. department of Agriculture consumption figures. Whole-grain foods contain higher amounts of fiber. But research suggests that it's the whole-grain that delivers abundant amounts of antioxidant vitamins and phytochemicals that appear to act together to provide protective effects.
Now the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is allowing whole-grain products to carry a new health claim that touts their potential to help reduce the risk of heart disease and some types of cancer. Under the new claim, foods that contain 51 percent or more of whole-grain ingredients by weight may say on their labels "Diets rich in whole-grain foods and other plant foods and low in total fat, saturated fat and cholesterol may reduce the risk of heart disease and certain cancers." Whole Grain Total and Wheaties are just two cereals that fall in this category. Look for more of this type of advertising on whole-grain products.

The Other Side Of The Story
Very few people know that there are strong arguments against eating a lot of whole-grain products, and that researchers don't agree on their value. Those interested in a natural "Darwinian" diet may be in the minority, still, the arguments are strong that whole-grain products may have their health costs.
One individual who has researched this problem extensively is Dr. Loren Cordain, Professor of Exercise Physiology at Colorado State University in Ft. Collins, Colorado, 80523.Dr. Cordain is a well-known expert in the area of Paleolithic nutrition. This newsletter features some of his work on grain and grain products. Readers are referred to a recent interview of Dr. Cordain in Life Service Supplement News of July 26, 1999 and an exhaustive recent chapter, Cereal Grains: Humanity's Double-Edged Sword, A.P. Simopoulos (Ed.), (1999), Evolutionary aspects of nutrition and health: Diet, exercise, genetics and chronic disease. Basel: Karger, pp 19-73. Unfortunately this remarkable book chapter will likely be buried along with the book, which costs about $187 with tax.
Building The Evidence
Approximately 17 plants species provides 90 percent of the world's food supply. The top 10 are: wheat, maize, rice, barley, soybean, cane sugar, sorghum, potato, oats, and cassava. Without these plants there is no way that the world could support the existing 6 billion people and the anticipated 12 to 15 billion people expected during the next century. If agriculture gave us anything, it was an easily grown mass diet that was calorically dense that could be stored, shipped, and processed in hundreds of different ways.
Around 20,000 to 10,000 years ago there was a mass extinction of large mammals throughout Europe, North America, and Asia. The environment was exploited until other forms of hunting and gathering was demanded. Birds and waterfowl appeared more frequently in the fossil record, and for the first time grindstones and crude mortars appeared in the archaeological record in the near east. This was the beginning of humanity's use of cereal grains for food.
Hunters and gatherers derived most of their calories from about 100-200 different species of wild animal fruits and vegetables. But with the advent of agriculture man became dependent upon a few staple cereal foods, 3-5 domesticated meat species, and 15-20 other plant foods. Many populations got up to 80 percent of their calories from a single cereal staple.
This was the turning point in human evolution. We abandoned the typical hunter-gatherer lifestyle, with its dependence on wild meat, fruits, vegetables, and nuts and took up dietary and activity patterns that were entirely new to us. We had evolved to adapt to the life of hunters and gatherers and now accepted a life that was incompatible with our adaptive qualities. The consequences were evident in a reduction in body size, from which we have only recently recovered, and in the appearance of diseases of sedentary and agricultural populations, such as cardiovascular disease, cancers, diabetes, high blood pressure, and bone diseases.
Many of our current problems can be blamed on our current nutritional and activity differences from our early hunter-gatherer existence. Agriculture may have launched civilizations, with all their advantages, but it also led to disease, wars, and a restructuring of social organizations. This is why Dr. Cordain refers to the development of agriculture as a two-edge sword.
So What's The Problem With Cereal Grains?
All grains have nutritional deficiencies. Moreover, as we eat more and more grain products we tend to eliminate other nutritional meats, fruits, and vegetables. In half the world, bread provides more than 50 percent of the total caloric intake, and in a few countries of Southern Asia, Central America and the Far East and Africa cereal products comprise up to 80 percent or more of the total caloric intake.

Think about your own intake of grain products. In a month's time, most of us will have eaten several slices of bread, several bowls of cereal with milk, pasta, rice, bagels, rolls, muffins, crackers, cookies, pastries, corn or other forms of chips, and tortillas. Most of these are refined and lack many important nutrients. Cereal grains contain undetectable amounts of vitamin C, B12, carotenoids, and other vitamins and minerals, and they tend to displace foods rich in these substances that are associated with a decreased risk of heart disease and many forms of common cancers. Moreover, cereal grains may actually inhibit the metabolism of these nutrients and cause autoimmune reactions.
Where Have The Vitamins And Minerals Gone?
Diets based primarily on plant foods tend to be low or deficient in vitamin B12. This nutrient is found exclusively in animal products. Vitamin B12 deficiency is related to megaloblastic anemia that results in cognitive dysfunction, and it increases the risk for arterial vascular disease and thrombosis. Obviously a diet based primarily on grains will be deficient in vitamin B12, including strict vegetarian diets. We were not evolved to eat plants exclusively.
Not only are cereal grains deficient in vitamins but many contain substances that decrease the intestinal absorption of many other important nutrients. Both wheat and sorghum are not only low in biotin but seem to have elements within them that elicit a depression of biotin metabolism. Vitamin D utilization by the body can be inhibited by an excessive consumption of cereal grains.
Cereal grains are good sources of phosphorous, potassium, and magnesium, but are poor sources of sodium and calcium. The high phytate content of whole grain cereals forms insoluble complexes with calcium, so that the net effect is a low Ca/P ratio. Phytate is a salt or ester of phytic acid that is capable of forming insoluble complexes with calcium, zinc, iron, and other nutrients and interfering with their absorption by the body. Thus a high phytate content frequently induces bone mineral pathologies in populations dependent upon cereal grains as a primary food source.
Iron metabolism is affected negatively by a diet high in phytate and fiber. Iron deficiency is the most prevalent nutritional problem in the world today. An iron deficiency has been associated with an irreversible impairment of a child's learning capabilities. The bioavailability of zinc, copper, and magnesium in cereal grains is generally low. The absorption of manganese, chromium, and selenium does not seem impaired. Zinc deficiency can result in hypogonadal dwarfism in which there is arrested growth. In countries with high cereal grain intake and hence low zinc absorption, hypogonadal dwarfism is nearly 3 percent and skeletal growth may be limited. The bioavailability of zinc from meat is four times higher than that from cereals.
Essential Fatty Acids (EFA)
Increased consumption of n-3 fatty acids (omega-3 acids), particularly eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) decreases triglycerides, decreases thrombotic tendencies, and reduces symptoms of many inflammatory and autoimmune diseases including arthritis and inflammatory bowel disease. In addition, n-3 fatty acids are associated with reduced mortality from coronary heart disease. N-3 fatty acids are found in meat and especially oily fish.
Cereal grains are low in fats, including the omega-3 fatty acids, including EPA and docasahexaenoic acid (DHA). Vegetarian diets based primarily upon cereals, legumes, and plant products have a high n-6 (omega-6) to n-3 ratio. Infants deprived of DHA show both visual and neural cortical abnormalities. In pregnant women with low DHA levels, duration of gestation is about 5.6 days shorter than for meat-eating controls. In these women emergency cesarean section were more common, and birth weight, head circumference, and body length were lower in the infants born to the vegetarian women.
Dr. Cordain concludes from these studies that, "Human dietary lipid requirements were shaped eons ago, long before the agricultural revolution, and long before humanity's adoption of cereal grains as staple foods. Hence, the lipid composition of diets based upon cereal grains, legumes, vegetable oils and other plant products is vastly at odds with that found in wild game meat and organs, the primary, evolutionary source of lipids to which the human genetic constitution is optimally adapted." (p 36)
Protein Loss In Grain Diets
Cereal diets lead to inadequate growth because of a reduction of protein and amino acids, compared to meat-supplemented diets. The fossil record shows a characteristic reduction in stature with the adoption of cereal-based diets. Further, vegan and vegetarian children often fail to grow as well as their omnivorous cohorts. The associated deficiencies include energy, protein, zinc, iron, copper, calcium, vitamin D, vitamin B12, and vitamin A. Just looking at protein content, the content of protein in cereal grains is about 12 percent, whereas in lean beef it is about 22 percent. Inadequate protein intake in cereals depending on cereal grains, and especially in the elderly who have difficulties with plant-only diets, is probably quite common.
Antinutrients In Cereal Grains
Plants produce chemicals to defend against predators, such as insects and birds. These secondary metabolites may protect the plants but they can have negative effects on human metabolism. Without naming all of these chemicals, it is clear that some can cause slower growth in mammals either by depressing growth directly or by depressing appetite. Some of these plant chemicals can act as allergens. Alpha-amylase inhibitor proteins are responsible for bakers' allergenic reaction to cereal flours, and can result in hypersensitivity reactions following wheat ingestion in children.
Lectins, which are proteins that are widespread in the plant kingdom, are recognized as major antinutrients of food. Cereal grain lectins are wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). It can interfere with digestive/absorptive activities and can shift the balance in bacterial flora shown to cause problems with normal gut metabolism. The potential to disrupt human health is high.
Autoimmune Diseases And Cereal Grain Consumption
Autoimmune diseases occur when the body loses the ability to distinguish invading proteins from self-proteins that make up the body. The loss results in destruction of self-tissues by the immune system. These diseases are thought to result from a combined influence of environmental and genetic influences.
Dietary cereal grains are noted to be causative agents for celiac disease and dermatitis herpetiformis, both autoimmune diseases. While the incidence of celiac disease is only about 2 percent of the population exposed to cereal grains the consequences can be severe. There are a number of diseases that may occur simultaneously with celiac disease, including Addison's disease, asthma, autoimmune thyroid disease, dental enamel defects, epilepsy, liver disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. Withdrawal of gluten-containing cereals from the diet can ameliorate symptoms of celiac disease and herpetiformis.
The form of protein believed to be associated with celiac disease in gliadin, but since at least 40 different protein components occur in a single variety of wheat it is unlikely that a single gliadin protein causes the disease. Other autoimmune diseases may be related to a high intake of cereal grains, including insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), rheumatoid arthritis, nephropathy, aphthous stomatitis (canker sores), and even multiple sclerosis. A myelin basic protein (MBP) is a suspected target antigen in multiple sclerosis. There are epidemiological reports that link both wheat and milk consumption to the incidence of MS. And there are reports showing remission of MS on gluten-free diets.
Beyond this, many neurological complications may be associated with immune reactivity to antigens found in cereal grains. It is suspected that autoimmune processes are involved.  Even autism and schizophrenia show susceptibilities to grain glutens that aggravate (or even cause) the conditions. There are clinical studies indicating that there is a rapid remission of schizophrenic symptoms by introducing gluten-free diets.
What All Of This Means For You
If you have digestive problems or suffer some of the classic autoimmune reactions (e.g. allergies) consider the possibilities that grains may be problematical. Look at your family members and your family history for clues about dietary problems. Adjust the ratio of cereal grains to meat, vegetables, and fruits and see if the adjustment has physiological and psychological effects. In my opinion one should supplement with vitamins, minerals, protein, and free fatty acids. Above all, eat a varied diet and not too much of one thing. And, finally, exercise regularly and with vigor. Put it all together and you have the "Darwinian" diet and exercise program.
See Dr.Mercola's site for more information on this topic http://www.mercola.com/

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The Vitamin You Need to Prevent Prostate Cancer

Increased intake of vitamin K2 may reduce the risk of prostate cancer by 35 percent, according to the results of European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC).
The potential benefits of K2 were most pronounced for advanced prostate cancer. Vitamin K1 intake did not offer any prostate benefits.

The findings were based on data from more than 11,000 men taking part in the EPIC Heidelberg cohort. It adds to a small but ever-growing body of science supporting the potential health benefits of vitamin K for bone, blood, skin, and now prostate health.




More than 500,000 people, world-wide, are diagnosed with prostate cancer each year and it is the direct cause of over 200,000 deaths. I find it helpful to view prostate cancer as the male equivalent of breast cancer. 
The conventional treatments for prostate cancer include surgery to remove the prostate gland or radiotherapy. However, more recent research has begun to question these radical treatments as they may not be necessary for most men diagnosed with a low-grade of the disease.
Two “Forgotten Vitamins” Prove Crucial for Cancer Reduction and Health
One specific treatment for prostate cancer that has been brought to the research forefront is vitamin D from sunshine exposure – another frequently forgotten vitamin besides vitamin K.
According to a previous study, men with higher levels of vitamin D in their blood were half as likely to develop aggressive forms of prostate cancer as those with lower amounts.
Another groundbreaking study discovered that correcting vitamin D deficiencies through appropriate sunshine exposure could prevent 600,000 cases of colorectal- and breast cancer each year, world-wide. Numerous studies confirm the link between vitamin D deficiency and multiple types of cancer.
Likewise, vitamin K has been found beneficial in the fight against various cancers, including liver, colon, stomach, nasopharynx, and oral cancer.
Studies have also suggested vitamin K may be used therapeutically in the treatment of patients with lung cancer, liver cancer, and leukemia.
Vitamin K is vital in heart disease prevention as well, because it helps prevent hardening of your arteries – a common risk factor in coronary artery disease and heart failure.
Other beneficial effects of vitamin K include:
  • Helpful against Alzheimer’s disease
  • Topical vitamin K may help to reduce bruising
  • May have antioxidant properties
  • Strengthens bone (some studies have actually shown vitamin K to be equivalent to Fosamax-type osteoporosis drugs)
  • Improves skin
It is such an important vitamin that, although I don’t typically recommend adding extra supplements to your diet, vitamin K is of the few supplements you should seriously consider because many people don’t get nearly enough of it on a daily basis through the foods they eat. 



Although the exact dosing is yet to be determined, one vitamin K expert, Dr. Cees Vermeer, recommends between 45 mcg and 185 mcg of vitamin K2 daily for adults. You must use caution on the higher doses if you take anticoagulants, but if you are generally healthy and not on these types of medications, I suggest 100 mcg of vitamin K2 daily.

It is quite likely that doses of several times that amount are safe for the average person, but we just lack the research to confirm it at this time.

If you’ve experienced stroke, cardiac arrest, or are prone to blood clotting, don’t take vitamin K without consulting your physician first.
Another important note is that vitamin K is a fat-soluble vitamin, which means that dietary fat is necessary for its absorption. One easy way to do this is by adding liquid vitamin K drops directly into your fish oil or krill oil. This will ensure that the vitamin K is well-absorbed by your body. Alternatively, you could add it to any other food that contains healthy fat.
To ensure you’re getting enough vitamin D, make it a habit of getting regular sunshine exposure – at minimum 15 minutes per day with at least 40 percent of your body uncovered.  For more in-depth information about the health benefits of sunshine, keep your eye out for my new book Dark Deception, due out later this year, or take a look at my Special Report on Sunshine, which is available now.
Which Kind of Vitamin K is Most Beneficial?
A lot of research has focused on synthetic vitamin K3 taken at high doses, and it is commonly being used with chemotherapy agents for enhanced effectiveness. However, I do not advise using the synthetic vitamin K3, but rather the plant-based vitamin K1 (phylloquinone, a.k.a. phytonadione) and bacterially produced vitamin K2 (menaquinone).
K1 is found in dark green leafy, and makes up about 90 per cent of the vitamin K in a typical Western diet. The following table lists some vegetable sources of K1 that you should consider eating frequently:
FoodVitamin K*
Collard Greens440
Spinach380
Salad Greens315
Kale270
Broccoli180
Brussels Sprouts177
FoodVitamin K*
Cabbage145
Olive Oil55
Asparagus60
Okra40
Green Beans33
Lentils22
K2, on the other hand, makes up only about 10 per cent of Western vitamin K consumption. 



Fermented foods, such as natto, typically have the highest concentration of vitamin K found in the human diet, and can provide several milligrams of vitamin K2 daily. This level far exceeds the amount found in dark green vegetables.

For example, vitamin K2 concentration after the consumption of natto has been shown to be about 10 times higher than that of vitamin K1 after eating spinach. Unfortunately, most Americans do not eat many fermented foods.
Vitamin K2 is synthesized by intestinal bacteria, and is absorbed from the distal small bowel. Keep in mind that taking antibiotics hampers vitamin K2 absorption.
Natto is such an amazing superfood that I seek to regularly incorporate it into my diet.
How to Prevent and Treat Prostate Cancer Naturally
In addition to adding vitamin K to your diet, these helpful tips on prostate cancer prevention and all-natural alternative treatments were given to me by former guest commentator Dr. Larry Clapp, author of Prostate Health in 90 Days Without Drugs or Surgery.
  • Cleanse past accumulation of toxins in your tissue, gut and colon with a good detox program
  • Cleanse your mouth of hidden infections from root canals, amalgam fillings, decay and gum infections. Then, chelate mercury from your body, nutritionally.
  • Avoid as many toxins as possible as your prostate was designed by nature to filter toxins from your semen.
  • Adopt the Total Health Program and eat a healthy diet based on your nutritional type. 

    All types must eliminate: 

    • High glycemic carbohydrates, such as sugar, pasta, potatoes, bread and most grains
    • All pasteurized dairy
    • Conventional grain and chemical fed animals
    • Most fish, due to high levels of mercury and PCB contamination
Also incorporate natural lycopene foods such as:
    • Tomatoes
    • Raspberries
    • Watermelon
    • Cabbage family foods, such as broccoli and broccoli sprouts to help control excess estrogens, the real enemy of the prostate.
  • Take a high quality fish oil with Vitamin E, to rebuild omega 3 fat levels, which are deficient in most people and a major cause of inflammation and disease.
  • Get full body sun exposure whenever possible to increase vitamin D levels, which need to be tested regularly.
  • Avoid biopsies, which permanently damage the prostate and can spread or cause cancer. Have a far more reliable, non invasive, Power Color Doppler Sonogram of your prostate done by Robert Bard, MD in New York City, www.cancerscan.com or other qualified Radiologists. PCD is the first line of diagnosis in other countries, but is not sanctioned by American Urologists so it is difficult to find.
See Dr. Mercola's site for more information and full store.  http://www.mercola.com/

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Lifestyle Changes That Will Keep You Alive



This is an excellent, empowering list for the New Year, one you can use to improve your health by leaps and bounds. The reality is that more than any pill or medical “treatment,” your lifestyle is what will determine your level of health now and in the years to come.
It was the ancient Roman poet Martial, wise beyond his time, who first said:
“Life’s not just being alive, but being well.”
This is still true today, many centuries later. Your health is a gift that cannot be bought, and once it’s lost it may be impossible to get back.
So I urge you to do some serious contemplating on what really matters in your life, and then make a commitment to doing all you can to support and nourish your health. Whether you realize it yet or not, you have at your disposal numerous methods to influence your physical and mental well-being, and ultimately take control of your health.
You are Not a Victim to Your Genes
Before I delve into more detail about exactly how you can change your lifestyle for the better, I first want to dispel the myth that you are a captive to your genes.
For some of you reading this, this may be a weight lifted off your shoulders. If your mother suffered from breast cancer, or you have a family history of diabetes or obesity, for instance, it does not mean that you are destined to have that same fate.
As proven through the massive genetic study, the Genome Project, each one of your genes can create up to 30,000 proteins, any and all of which can create a different outcome. So the fact that you may have a genetic “predisposition” for a certain illness does not mean that you are doomed to develop it.
Rather, there is something that either activates or suppresses your genes, and that “something” is usually lifestyle-related. If you are constantly stressed you will likely have a different genetic expression than if you focus your thoughts in a positive direction.
Likewise, if you eat healthy, fresh, whole foods you will have a different genetic expression than if you rely on sugar and fast foods.
Ultimately, this is great news, as it means you can make the choice to help your genes express themselves in a positive, disease-fighting way.
Which Diseases Can Your Lifestyle Help Prevent?
A far more appropriate question would be, “What can’t it?” -- because the choices you make on a daily basis truly influence just about every disease known to man, and probably more than handful of those yet to be discovered!
Here is just a short list of some of the major diseases your decision to eat well, exercise, reduce stress, and so on will help to ward off:
Again, this is by no means an exhaustive list. If you name a disease or illness, there’s a good chance your lifestyle can help prevent it or influence it in a positive way.
My Top Lifestyle Recommendations for a Healthy 2012
The start of a new year is always a good time to evaluate your past mistakes and make a fresh start. So if you haven’t been leading the type of lifestyle you’d like to be, I give you permission to wipe the slate clean right now.
Today is a new day, and today can be the day you start leading a lifestyle of health and wellness. With that in mind, here are my top recommendations to make 2012 your healthiest year yet.
1. Learn How to Effectively Cope With Stress
In my past experience treating patients with serious chronic illnesses, the vast majority have previous emotional stress that contributed to their problem. And for most of the serious illnesses, the trauma stems back to their childhood.
But according to at least one recent study, it doesn’t take serious trauma to cause these changes. Even normal “everyday” emotional experiences can have a detrimental impact on your future health.
Meditation, prayer, physical activity and exercise are all viable options that can help you maintain emotional and mental equilibrium. I also strongly believe in using tools such as the Meridian Tapping Technique (MTT) to address deeper, oftentimes hidden emotional problems.
Vitamin D, often referred to as “the sunshine vitamin,” is different from other vitamins in that it influences your entire body. Vitamin D receptors have been found in almost every type of human cell, from your brain to your bones, so its power to optimize your health is truly great.
Please remember that vitamin D will optimize over 2,000-3,000 genes in your body or 10 percent of your total genes!
Studies have shown you can decrease your risk of cancer by MORE THAN HALF and lower your risk of many other common diseases simply by optimizing your vitamin D levels with sun exposure.
3. Eat a Healthy Diet That’s Right for Your Nutritional Type
My nutrition plan, based on natural whole foods, is your first step toward increasing your chances of living a longer, healthier life. The heart of my program is the elimination, or at the very least, drastic reduction of grains and sugar in your diet, while focusing on the foods that are right for your unique biochemistry.
4. Eat Plenty of Raw Food
One of the most important aspects of a healthy diet that is most frequently overlooked is the issue of eating your food uncooked, in its natural raw state.
Unfortunately, as you may be aware, over 90 percent of the food purchased by Americans is processed. And when you’re consuming these kinds of denatured and chemically altered foods, it’s no surprise we have an epidemic of chronic and degenerative diseases.
Ideally you’ll want to eat as many foods as possible in their unprocessed state; typically organic, biodynamic foods that have been grown locally, and are therefore in season.
But even when you choose the best foods available you can destroy most of the nutrition if you cook them. I believe it’s really wise to strive to get as much raw food in your diet as possible. I personally try to eat about 80 percent of my food raw, including raw eggs andmeats.
5. Optimize Your Insulin and Leptin Levels
Eating sugar and grains will increase your insulin level, which is one of the fastest ways to premature aging. Leptin is another heavyweight hormone associated with the aging process.
Like your insulin levels, if your leptin levels become elevated, your body systems will develop a resistance to this hormone, which will wreak havoc in your body.
Ron Rosedale, MD, who is one of the leading experts on leptin, does an excellent job of explaining the links between insulin, leptin, your weight and your overall health, and has done so in numerous articles posted on my site.
Your diet, as discussed in steps three and four above, is the key to maintaining the balance of these two hormones.
6. Exercise
The benefits of exercise are staggering, and if you think you can achieve or maintain optimal health without it, you’re deceiving yourself. For example, it helps you to:
  • Sleep better
  • Lose weight, gain weight or maintain weight, depending on your needs
  • Improve your resistance to fight infections
  • Lower your risk of cancer, heart disease and diabetes
  • Help your brain work better, making you smarter
If you’ve fallen off the exercise wagon, watch my Primary Principles of Exercise video to get back on track.
7. Consume Healthy Fat
The science is loud and clear on this point: omega-3 fats are essential for optimal health.
The omega-3 found naturally in fish and seafood is high in two fatty acids crucial to human health, DHA and EPA. These two fatty acids are pivotal in preventing heart disease, cancer, and many other diseases. Your brain is also highly dependent on DHA -- low DHA levels have been linked to depression, schizophrenia, memory loss, and a higher risk of developing Alzheimer's.
Unfortunately most fish commercially available today (even wild-caught varieties) are polluted with mercury, PCBs and other toxic substances, which is why I recommend you take a supplement like krill oil instead of getting it from your food.
8. Limit Your Exposure to Toxins
The number of toxic chemicals and their sources is so large, addressing them all could easily require an entire library, but I believe you can help you keep your toxic load as low as possible by becoming an informed and vigilant consumer.
This includes tossing out your toxic household cleaners, soaps, personal hygiene products, air fresheners, bug sprays, lawn pesticides, and insecticides, just to name a few, and replacing them with non-toxic alternatives.
For a review of some of the most common sources of household dangers, I suggest you review this previous article, or search my site for any number of different toxins by name.
9. Make Pure Water Your Primary Beverage
Every day your body loses water through urine and sweat, and needs to be replenished. You can actually survive without food for months, but without water you’d die after a few days, so needless to say, water is absolutely essential to life.
You can easily tell what your water requirement is by using your thirst and the color of your urine as guides. Your urine should be a very light-colored yellow. If it is a deep, dark yellow then you are likely not drinking enough water.
Further, if you are healthy, then drinking whenever you feel thirsty should be an adequate guide of how much water you need. You can confirm that you are drinking enough water by looking at the color of your urine, as mentioned above.
As for obtaining clean, pure water, installing a water filter in your home is your best bet. For the latest recommendations on the methods that work best to remove impurities and toxic byproducts caused by water chlorination from your tap water, please review this previous article, Tap Water Toxins—Discover Your Three Best Solutions, Straight From the Experts.
10. Get Plenty of Quality Sleep
Scientists have discovered that your circadian rhythms regulate the energy levels in your cells. In addition, the proteins involved with your circadian rhythm and metabolism are intrinsically linked and dependent upon each other.
Therefore, when your circadian rhythm is disrupted, it can have a profound influence on your physical health. For example, research has also linked disrupted sleep cycles to serious health problems like depression, coronary heart diseases, and even cancer.
If you have any kind of sleep problem, whether you’re having trouble falling asleep or staying asleep, my article 33 Secrets to a Good Night's Sleep is packed with great tips to help you finally get some good rest.

For more information and full article, please checkout Dr. Mercola website http://www.mercola.com/

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Blackberries Peaches recipes cure for cancer

Blackberries Peaches recipes cure for cancerBlackberries Peaches recipes cure for cancer
Fighting and healing cancer with fruit Blackberries Peaches Serve this colorful lavender-spiked blackberry-peach compote at a brunch or with small scoops of vanilla frozen yogurt for a glorious yet healthful dessert. If you can, choose freestone over cling peaches for this recipe: the pits will pull out more easily, which helps keep the peach halves intact. mangosteen

Ingredients
2 cups water
1/2 cup orange juice
6 tablespoons clover honey or other mild honey
4 4-inch-long sprigs fresh lavender (see Tips), plus small sprigs or lavender flowers for garnish
1 3-inch-long piece vanilla bean, split lengthwise
4 just-ripe medium peaches
1 cup fresh blackberries
Low-fat vanilla frozen yogurt or light ice cream (optional)
More Healthy Recipe Ideas
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Healthy Low-Calorie Blueberry Recipes
Our Top 50 Recipes for Summer
Low Calorie Desserts for Your Lunchbox
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Preparation
Combine water, orange juice, honey, large lavender sprigs and vanilla bean in a large nonreactive saucepan (see Tips). Bring just to a boil, stirring until the honey dissolves. Add whole peaches to the boiling liquid and cook, gently turning, until the skins start to loosen, 1 to 2 minutes. Remove the peaches to a colander with a slotted spoon; rinse under cold water and let drain.
Meanwhile, adjust the heat so the poaching liquid boils briskly and begins to reduce. Using a paring knife, peel the peaches and add the skins to the boiling liquid. Cut the peaches in half vertically, keeping the halves intact. Remove the pits, if possible; if it’s too difficult, leave them in until after poaching.
Adjust the heat to a bare simmer. Return the peaches to the pan and poach until they are not quite tender when pierced with a fork, 3 to 7 minutes; they should still hold their shape. Transfer them to a nonreactive bowl with a slotted spoon. When cool enough to handle, gently cut out and discard any remaining pits. Cover and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes and up to 3 days.
Add blackberries to the barely simmering liquid in the pan. Poach for 1 to 2 minutes. Remove them to a small bowl with a slotted spoon. Cover and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes and up to 3 days.
Adjust the heat so the poaching liquid boils briskly and cook until reduced to about 2/3 cup, 14 to 18 minutes, watching carefully to prevent scorching. Strain the liquid through a fine sieve into a nonreactive bowl, pressing down on the solids to force through as much liquid as possible; discard solids. Cover and refrigerate the syrup for at least 30 minutes and up to 3 days.
To serve, let the fruit and syrup come to almost room temperature. Arrange the peach halves in pairs in individual serving bowls. Spoon a small scoop of frozen yogurt or ice cream into each half, if desired. Top with the blackberries and drizzle with the fruit syrup. Garnish with small lavender sprigs or flowers, if desired.
Tips & Notes
Make Ahead Tip: Prepare through Step 5, cover and refrigerate for up to 3 days.
Tips: If fresh lavender is unavailable, substitute 1 teaspoon dried culinary lavender; it is available in some supermarket herb and spice sections and in many natural-foods stores. Add it to the poaching liquid in Step 5 (after the peaches and blackberries have been poached and removed from the saucepan). Be sure to use food-grade dried lavender, not lavender sold for crafting projects.
Nonreactive pan, bowl or baking dish: A nonreactive bowl, pan or baking dish—stainless-steel, enamel-coated or glass—is necessary when cooking with acidic foods, such as lemon, to prevent the food from reacting with the pan. Reactive pans, such as aluminum and cast-iron, can impart off colors and/or flavors.
Nutrition
Per serving:  163 calories;  0 g fat (  0 g sat ,  0 g mono );  0 mg cholesterol;  42 g carbohydrates; 26 g added sugars; 2 g protein; 3 g fiber; 5 mg sodium; 324 mg potassium.

Nutrition Bonus: Vitamin C (50% daily value)
Carbohydrate Servings: 3
Exchanges: 1 fruit, 2 carbohydrate (other)
fateatingwell . Nutrition and List_of_nutrition_guides