THE VITAMINS
by Dr. Lawrence Wilson
© March 2019, LD Wilson Consultants, Inc.
All information in
this article is for educational purposes only. It is not for the diagnosis, treatment, prescription or cure
of any disease or health condition.
Definition. The
vitamins are a group of mainly unrelated chemicals that are absolutely required
for our health, but are needed in small quantities. Most were discovered and isolated from various foods in the late
1800s and early 1900s.
A group of scientists experimented with animals and
found that the animals simply did not thrive without these important chemicals
in their diets. Some developed
nervous ticks without them, others had defective babies, and others just slowly
died without them.
At about the same time vitamins were discovered,
the drug industry introduced antibiotics and other Òwonder drugsÓ, many of
which have turned out to be less than wonderful. The publicity given to drugs outshined the less glamorous
vitamins and, as a result, vitamins receive much less attention than they
deserve.
Function
of vitamins. Vitamins function as co-factors, also
called co-enzymes,
for many chemical reactions in the body.
This means that the vitamin must be present for a certain chemical
reaction to occur. A particular
vitamin may activate,
facilitate, inhibit or actually be part of an enzyme or chemical needed in the
body.
The word vitamin was coined in 1911 by Dr. Casimir Funk. He was a food scientist who discovered
a substance in rice polishings that would cure beri beri. At the time, this was a somewhat
mysterious disease that occurred in people who lived on a diet of mainly white
rice.
Vitamin
groups. Vitamins
are classified by letters such as A, B, C, and so forth. In
addition, they are divided into two general groups – fat
soluble (A, D, E, K and P) and water soluble (vitamins B and C). These are the main classifications of
vitamins.
The concept of water soluble or fat soluble is
important because water soluble vitamins do not remain long in the body and
must be eaten on almost a daily basis.
In contrast, fat soluble vitamins are stored
more easily, usually in the liver.
As a result, they need not be eaten on a daily basis, as long as one
gets enough of them on some regular basis such as weekly or even monthly.
GETTING
YOUR VITAMINS
Today it is difficult, if not impossible, to obtain
enough vitamins just from our food for several reasons:
á
Agricultural
factors. Modern food crops generally contain much less vitamins than
crops grown 100 years ago. This is
due to genetic engineering of food, hybridization of foods, the use of chemical
fertilizers instead of manures, and pesticide and insecticides that subtly
damage the soil or the crop.
á
Transportation losses. Many crops are grown in south America or even China, and transported half way around
the world. Most vitamins begin to
break down as soon as a crop is picked.
Transportation loss can decrease the levels of vitamin C, for example,
by half.
A
related issue is that crops that must be transported long distances are often
picked before they are ripe. This
may also decrease the vitamin levels of the food in some cases. This is why, at times, frozen
vegetables that are quickly frozen close to the farm are actually more
nutritious than some ÒfreshÓ vegetables.
á
Food processing. The
most important loss of vitamins and minerals usually occurs during food
processing. For example, when
whole wheat or whole rice are processed into white
flour or white rice, up to half or more of the vitamin content of the food may
be lost.
This
is why I suggest avoiding all white flour, white sugar, and white rice as much
as possible. These are called
Òempty caloriesÓ because their vitamins and minerals are missing.
Canning,
drying, freezing, and adding chemicals to foods also can deplete some vitamins.
á
Improper food
preparation. Overcooking food, eating leftovers that
are more than a day or two old, and even smothering food with ketchup and
relishes can interfere or destroy some of the vitamin content of the food. Eating too many foods at once (poor
food combinations) interferes with digestion and makes it harder for the body
to absorb the nutrients from some foods.
á
Improper eating
habits. Failing to chew food thoroughly, eating in a hurry, eating
when anxious or upset, drinking any liquid with meals, drinking a lot of coffee
or soda pop, and too many foods at one meal can all impair digestion and the
absorption of some vitamins.
á
Increased needs
for vitamins today. This includes millions of people, and
is discussed below.
For all the above reasons, it is very difficult, if
not impossible to obtain enough vitamins from food alone. Anyone who tells you there is no need
for food supplements, in my opinion, is not aware of the current needs of most
people.
To avoid supplements is literally an evil teaching
on earth at this time. We often
hear the outright lie that supplements are not regulated. They are very regulated!
FACTORS
THAT INCREASE ONEÕS NEED FOR VITAMINS
Many common stresses and other lifestyle and
dietary factors increase the need for vitamins. Here are some of the most important ones, according to
scientific research.
Age.
Children are growing fast and often need more B-complex vitamins,
omega-3 fatty acids and others.
Older people also have increased vitamin needs
because they tend not to be able to chew food as well, and have much weaker
digestion due to low levels of digestive enzymes.
Pregnancy and lactation. This
factor is well understood in medicine, but most doctors ignore it and instead
depend upon a Òpre-natal vitamin tabletÓ that is often woefully
inadequate. There is no substitute
when pregnant or breastfeeding for superior nutrition and supplements of high
quality and potency to assist the health of the mother and baby.
Lifestyle habits such as smoking, drinking alcohol,
or stress. These lifestyle habits or situations use up many
more vitamins as the body seeks to cope with the added stress factors. As a result, they increase the need for
vitamins A, B, C, D and perhaps others, for example, if one is smoking anything
at all.
Drinking any alcohol at all enhances the need for
zinc, magnesium, and vitamins A, B-complexa and
others. Stress can increase the
need for all of the vitamins, depending on the type of stress.
Illnesses, injuries or traumas. These
are stresses that usually increase the need for most vitamins.
Toxic metals or toxic chemicals in the body. These
often interfere with or destroy vitamins.
As an example, too much copper in the body destroys vitamin C. This type of metal poisoning occurs
quite commonly, especially in women.
Most people have hundreds of toxic chemicals in their bodies and some of
about two dozen toxic metals.
Development.
This fascinating process is the subject of a number of articles on this
website. It involves the growth of
the brain and changes in several body organs.
It requires more of some nutrients including
vitamins A, C, D, and K in particular.
It is the reason we suggest eating very large portions of cooked
vegetables at least twice every day.
In addition, development requires vitamin supplements that are found in
the metabolic packs and other products used in development programs.
THE
MAJOR VITAMINS -
VITAMIN
A
Vitamin
A is a fat-soluble vitamin discovered in 1906. It is one of the most important, and is often deficient in
young people today, especially vegetarians or those who do not eat much meat. Vitamin A can tend to slow the
oxidation or metabolic rate.
Food sources. The
best sources are meats such as liver, chicken, turkey and fish oils. Vegetables do not contain preformed
vitamin A. Instead, some colored
vegetables contain beta carotene, which can be
converted to vitamin A in the body.
However, if the thyroid gland is sluggish, and this is very common, the
body often cannot convert carotenes to fully formed vitamin A. Therefore, we never depend upon
beta-carotene or other carotenes in vegetables as good sources of vitamin A.
Functions. One of its major roles is to strengthen and
support epithelial cells, which make up the skin and mucus membranes of the
body. Mucus membranes are exactly
like skin, but are inside the body such as the lining of your mouth, throat,
digestive tract and elsewhere.
Vitamin A thus strengthens the bodyÕs ability to
keep out all invading bacteria and other pathogenic or disease-causing micro-organisms.
For this reason, vitamin A assists the immune response of the body. One can take more vitamin A if one
feels one is getting a cold, for example, and it will often help stop the cold
altogether or reduce its duration and severity.
Vitamin A is also needed in the retina for vision,
blood formation, genetic activity such as protein synthesis, proper growth and
development, an anti-oxidant, and bone formation. In high doses, it may be helpful for some cancer patients.
Deficiency
symptoms. Low vitamin A is a
leading cause of blindness in the world.
Other symptoms include poor night vision, recurrent infections, skin problems
and other subtle health complaints.
When more is needed. Pregnancy, breastfeeding,
vegetarian diets, infections, fevers, poor vision, stress and liver problems.
B-COMPLEX
VITAMINS
The
B-complex vitamins, along with vitamin C, are the water-soluble vitamins. They play so many roles in the body it
is difficult to list them all here.
Among the major ones are sugar metabolism, energy production in the cells,
liver function, brain activity and many others. Most of the B vitamins speed up a sluggish oxidation rate
except for choline and inositol,
which may slow it down. We
recently found we need to supplement these, at least in some people, with
sunflower or soy lecithin.
THIAMINE
OR VITAMIN B1. Chinese
medical textbooks as far back as 2700 BC describe a disease called beri beri, caused by eating a
diet high in white rice. Symptoms
were mostly neurological including peripheral neuritis, followed eventually by
death. In 1926, scientists found a
substance in rice bran that reverses beri beri and gave it the name of vitamin B1 or thiamine.
Food sources. Among
the best sources are rice polishings, wheat germ,
liver, eggs, brewers yeast, nutritional yeast and other organ meats.
Vegetables and fruits are very poor sources. For this reason, vegetarians are often
low in this vitamin and this tends to shorten their lives.
Functions. Thiamine is involved in energy production, nerve
conduction, and carbohydrate metabolism.
It is also required for aerobic metabolism, which means the use of
oxygen in the body to heal and produce energy.
This vitamin is used in megadose
therapies, at times, for schizophrenia, depression, lumbago, sciatica, facial
paralysis and other conditions with some success. This would indicate that some people have a metabolic defect
and need more of it. However, it
is also possible that toxic metals or intestinal defects are the reason why
some people seem to benefit from high doses of B1.
Deficiency
symptoms. Fatigue, depression, low
body temperature, anxiety, constipation, weight loss or gain, nerve pain or
numbness, retarded growth, anorexia, digestive complaints, muscle weakness, low
reflexes, circulatory problems, memory loss, and muscle atrophy.
When more is needed. Pregnancy, breastfeeding, heavy exercise, alcohol
consumption, high carbohydrate diet, processed food diets, vegetarian diets,
old age, digestive disturbances, and use of antibiotics.
RIBOFLAVIN
OR VITAMIN B2. This
was discovered around 1930 as a growth factor found in some yeasts.
Food
sources. The best sources are
organ meats such as liver, brewers yeast, nutritional yeast and some dairy
products.
Functions.
Energy production in the
mitochondria, It
is also helpful for fetal development of a baby, the eyes and the skin.
Deficiency
symptoms. These
include fatigue and perhaps cracks on the sides of the mouth called cheilosis.
There is no major disease associated with deficiency, as there is for
some of the other B vitamins. Some
doctors believe that cataracts may occur if one is low in B2 for a long time,
though I am not sure I agree.
When is
more needed. Pregnancy,
breastfeeding, liver problems, alkaline conditions of the water, food or body,
heavy exercise, antibiotic use, digestive disturbances, fevers,
hyperthyroidism, trauma and stress.
Most older people need more as well.
NIACIN, NIACINAMIDE, NICOTINIC ACID
OR VITAMIN B3 is a very critical
vitamin for energy production, brain functioning and hundreds of other chemical
reactions in the body.
Food
sources. Peanuts, brewers yeast, nutritional yeast,
organ meats, tuna fish, halibut, swordfish, chicken and turkey. (I do not recommend eating tuna fish,
halibut, or swordfish due to ther high mercury
content.) Fruits and vegetables
are poor sources.
Functions:
Tissue metabolism, carbohydrate
and energy production, fat metabolism
Deficiency
symptoms. Common symptoms are fatigue, low
stomach acid, retarded growth, depression, schizophrenia, other mental
problems, weakness, poor appetite, indigestion, skin diseases, dark
pigmentation of the skin, diarrhea, swollen tongue, irritability, headaches,
sleep difficulties, memory loss.
If the deficiency gets worse, a disease occurs
called pellagra. It is characterized by the four Ds: diarrhea, dermatitis,
dementia and death. Many cases of
depression, anxiety and other so-called emotional illness can be caused by a
mild deficiency of this and other B vitamins.
When is
more needed. Pregnancy,
breastfeeding, old age, high-calorie diets, malnutrition, skin diseases,
perhaps high cholesterol, high intake of corn, digestive disturbances and
stress.
PANTOTHENIC ACID OR VITAMIN B5 is essential for energy production in the
body. It is especially important
to manufacture the adrenal hormones such as adrenalin, noradrenaline,
aldosterone and cortisone. The glands are weak in most people today, in part due to low
levels of pantothenic acid in many people.
Food
sources. Brewers
yeast, liver, kidney, eggs, peanuts, wheat germ, herring and royal jelly. Vegetarians are often tired due to low
levels of this vitamin.
Functions. The main ones are cellular energy production and
adrenal hormone production.
However, it is also involved in stress resistance, fat metabolism,
acetylcholine synthesis and antibody synthesis. It also works closely with the other B vitamins to prevent B
vitamin deficiencies.
Deficiency
symptoms. These include fatigue, weakness, muscle
tightness, neuromotor disturbances such as tremors,
heart disease, digestive problems, low resistance to stress and infections, and
depression.
When more is needed. Stress, aging, arthritis, illnesses of all kinds, malabsorption syndromes, weakness, depression, antibiotic
use and burning feet syndrome.
PYRIDOXINE, PYRIDOXYL-5-PHOSPHATE OR
VITAMIN B6 is a very important
chemical in the body. It is
required for the synthesis of proteins and amino acids. It is also involved in the metabolism
of all foods – fats, proteins, sugars and starches.
Food
sources. These include liver,
herring, salmon, brewers yeast, nuts, wheat germ brown rice and blackstrap
molasses. (I do not recommend
eating too much salmon or blackstrap molasses, due to mercury in fish and too
much iron in molasses.)
Functions.
Vitamin B6 is important for protein synthesis, as well as the metabolism of
fats, carbohydrates and sugars. It
is also an excellent copper antagonist.
Deficiency
symptoms. There is no specific
disease associated with deficiency.
However, most people have too little vitamin B6. This can cause fatigue, copper
toxicity, skin diseases, depression, convulsions, seizures, connective tissue
problems, tissue breakdown in general, and any high copper symptoms. Low levels
can cause a hypochromic, microcytic
anemia that looks exactly like an iron deficiency or a copper imbalance
anemia. B6 deficiency may cause
some cases of carpal tunnel syndrome.
When more is needed. Pregnancy, breastfeeding, irradiation or having a
lot of x-rays, inborn errors of metabolism, toxic metal poisoning, especially
copper, high protein diets and stress.
Slow oxidation and aging increase the need as well in many cases.
CYANOCOBALAMIN OR METHYLCOBALAMIN OR
VITAMIN B12 is an unusual vitamin
in that it is hard to absorb for many people, especially as they age.
Food
sources. Kidney, liver, brain,
heart, milk, beef, egg yolk, clams, oysters, sardines, salmon, and herring. (I
do not recommend eating any clams or oysters due to high levels of toxic
metals. Also, all fish should be
restricted to twice per week maximum due to mercury contamination.)
Functions.
Vitamin B12 is an extremely
important substance for protein synthesis, the nervous system. blood formation, and for fat and nucleic acid
synthesis.
Deficiency
symptoms. Low levels, which are
very common in older people and those under stress, cause nervous ticks, memory
loss, dementia, AlzheimerÕs like conditions, fatigue, weakness, possibly permanent
nerve damage, hyperactivity, and other vague complaints. It also can cause a macrocytic,
macrochromic anemia called pernicious anemia.
When more is needed. Pregnancy, breast feeding, infancy and childhood,
pernicious anemia, high vitamin C intake, loss of intrinsic factor in the
stomach (usually due to stress or aging), low stomach acid, malabsorption
syndromes, anorexia, vegetarian diets, low meat intake, neuropathy, alcohol
use, aging, stress, digestive disturbances and perhaps antibiotic use.
Note: All
vegetarians must take a vitamin B12 supplement, as it is such a critical
vitamin and deficiency can occur slowly and insidiously. Some vegetarians claim they obtain it
from seaweed or other vegetable sources, but I would not rely on this, since vegetables
are very poor sources.
Vitamin B12 is the only vitamin that often must be
given intramuscularly or intravenously instead of by mouth. This is because it requires something
called intrinsic factor in the stomach for its absorption. This chemical is often low in older
people, those with intestinal disorders (which includes many people), and
especially those under stress.
FOLIC ACID, FOLATE OR METHYL FOLATE has many critical functions in the body, mostly
involved with the synthesis of nucleic acids, which are chemicals needed in the
nucleus of the cells. Many medical
drugs, especially cancer chemotherapy agents, can deplete folic acid and this
may be how they work to some degree.
However, this also makes them very toxic for the body.
Folic acid supplements. Sadly, folic acid levels in
vitamin pills are restricted by law to very low levels. Although the rationale for this made
sense – to prevent B12 anemia from being masked by high levels of folic
acid – the result is even worse.
People who take vitamins are not getting enough folic acid, though they
believe they are because they are taking a supplement.
Food
sources. Liver, kidney, yeast,
green vegetables, legumes or dried beans, peanuts, mushrooms, beef, veal,
brewers yeast, and egg yolk.
Functions. Nucleic acid synthesis and
metabolism, growth, methylation, and porphyrin synthesis. These are pigments that are very important for health. It is also involved in regulating cell
division in the nucleus of the cells.
Thus it may be important for cancer prevention. It is also a powerful copper
antagonist, and it may increase the oxidation or metabolic rate.
Deficiency
symptoms. Birth defects, macrocytic anemia, red and swollen tongue, diarrhea,
gastrointestinal ulcers or other lesions, malabsorption,
celiac disease or gluten intolerance, and pancytopenia
(a blood disorder),
When more is needed. Pregnancy, illness, some anemias,
old age, alcohol use, mental illness, retardation, gastric disturbance, malabsorption, diarrhea, antibiotic and some anti-convulsant therapy, leukemia, cheilosis
(cracks at the sides of the mouth), infections and HodgkinÕs disease.
PABA OR PARA-AMINOBENZOIC ACID. PABA
is one of the less essential B vitamins.
It is also known as vitamin H or vitamin B7. It is helpful for the skin, hair and nails, and may reverse
or prevent premature graying of the hair.
A supplement may help with fatigue, depression, irritability, and other
common B-vitamin deficiency states.
BIOTIN. Biotin is considered one of the less important
B-complex vitamins, but this is a mistake. It is commonly deficient in the population, especially in
slow oxidizers. One reason for
this is that intestinal bacteria can synthesize some biotin, but only if the
intestinal flora is correct, which is often not the case. As a result, many people suffer from a
sub-clinical deficiency of this critical B-complex vitamin.
Food
sources. Excellent sources are egg
yolk, liver, kidney, brewers yeast, whole grains and peanuts. It should be produced in the
intestines, but often this does not occur adequately today due to a damaged
intestinal tract and incorrect intestinal flora, especially if one has recently
taken an antibiotic.
Eating raw egg whites can induce a biotin
deficiency. Cooking the egg white,
even for 2 or 3 minutes, destroys avidin, a chemical
that interferes with biotin.
Functions.
Biotin is essential for amino acid
metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, protein synthesis
from DNA, energy production in the Krebs energy cycle within the cells, hair,
skin and nail health, the nervous system, the sex glands, and prevention of
some birth defects.
Deficiency
symptoms. These are common today, though they
usually go undiagnosed. They
include dandruff, other skin disorders, fatigue, lethargy, muscle pain,
hypersensitivity of the skin, and possibly hair loss.
When more is needed. Eating raw egg whites, certain skin diseases,
infants with dandruff, antibiotic or sulfa drug use, and pregnancy.
CHOLINE. Choline is an essential nutrient that is often grouped as
a B-complex vitamin, although it differs from the others in some ways.
Functions. These
include maintaining the structural integrity of the nervous system and cell
membranes, and the production of a critical and calming neurotransmitter,
acetylcholine. It is also the
major source for methyl groups, a system of the body that has to do with the
adrenal glands and keeping them functioning properly.
Food
sources. Excellent sources are
cowÕs liver (we donÕt recommend this food), eggs, chicken, milk, especially raw
milk, and some of the cruciferous vegetables. Vegetable oils such as sufnlower
oil and soybean oil, are other sources. Lecithin, made from sunflower or soy
oil, is a rich source of choline and inositol.
Deficiency symptoms. A mild deficiency of this
vitamin is very common. Symptoms
can include irritability, anxiety, bipolar disorder, perhaps seizures, and an
elevated ALT enzyme level. More
severe deficiency causes liver disease, atherosclerosis, neural tube defects
and memory problems in newborns, elevated homocysteine,
higher risk for pre-eclampsia, premature birth, and
low birth weight babies, a greater risk for colds, breast cancer and
inflammation, and a risk of copper imbalance.
When more is needed. Old age, endurance athletes,
pregnancy, vegetarian diets, alcohol use, and diets of refined foods. Women may need more than men (new research).
INOSITOL. This is another important B-complex substance that
is usually classified as a vitamin.
Food
sources. Excellent sources are
whole grains, (but not white flour or white rice). Other sources are nuts, beans, and fruit, especially
cantaloupe, other melons and oranges. (we do not
recommend eating any fruit). Lecithin made from sunflower or soy oil are also good
sources.
Functions. The main functions are regulatory or signaling activities. Inositol and
related compounds help regulate insulin, calcium concentration in the bones and
the blood, the cell membrane electrical potential, serotonin and cholesterol
and other fat levels in the blood.
Deficiency
symptoms. Some studies indicate that a deficiency
is associated with some cases of depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder,
panic disorder, agorophobia, bulimia and bipolar
disorder, although the research is thin.
More may be helpful for some cases of polycystic ovary syndrome or PCOS.
When more is needed. Generally, more is required whenever one is under
stress. Particular times include
pregnancy, breastfeeding, illnesses and other types of stressful situations.
NOTE: New research (March 2019) indicates that some
people need to supplement with more lecithin than is in the current metabolic
packs that we use. For details,
read Lecithin.
NEWER B-COMPLEX SUBSTANCES:
PANGAMIC
ACID OR VITAMIN B15. This was
isolated from apricot pits in 1951 by Ernst Krebs, Jr. and his father, Ernst
Krebs, Sr. It
is mainly involved in energy production and it is still controversial as to
whether it is an essential nutrient.
Most research about it has come from the former Soviet Union, where it
has been used to increase athletic performance and to help correct a number of
health conditions.
NITRILOSIDES
OR VITAMIN B17. This interesting substance was also
isolated from apricot pits by Ernst Krebs, Jr. It appears to have a specifically anti-cancer effect. A cyanide-containing molecules
releases the deadly cyanide ion only at the site of cancer in the body.
Food sources include the pits of apricots, apples
and a few other fruits. It has a
slightly bitter taste. Deficiency
may be associated with an increased risk of cancer. Those most at risk today include the entire population. We do not recommend eating fruit. Purified laetrile is currently banned
in America and many other nations, sadly.
Apricot pits are sold, however, we usually donÕt find them necessary.
VITAMIN C OR ASCORBIC ACID
Vitamin C is an important vitamin. It is a modified sugar and is usually
made from corn, or other sugary foods.
It is water soluble and does not stay long in
the body, so it must be eaten daily.
Most animals can synthesize enough of it, but humans often cannot, so
they need to ingest some from food.
Vitamin C is found in highest concentration in the
retina of the eyes and adrenal glands, as well as all the other glands of the
body. However, it is present in
all human tissues. It is extremely
yin in Chinese medical terms, but an extremely important substance in human
physiology. Most people do not
ingest enough of it.
Food
sources. Vitamin C is found in most foods, but mainly in green
vegetables and some fruits.
Cooking food for more than about 15 minutes can destroy most of it, so
raw foods are richer sources. One
of the best sources is carrot juice that we recommend for everyone, about 10-12
ounces daily for adults.
Functions. It is a powerful anti-oxidant, and required for
many oxidation-reduction reactions in the cells. It is important for wound healing, formation of bone and
cartilage, growth, adrenal activity, health of the capillaries and other
connective tissue, and detoxification of metals and chemicals from the body.
It may have other roles, such as helping to prevent
or heal many infections, particularly viral infections. It also chelates
and removes toxic substances, and enhances cell respiration.
Deficiency
symptoms. Severe deficiency causes
scurvy, a
disease that was common among sailors who had little access to fresh food. The British navy figured out how to
prevent or cure the problem by requiring the sailors to eat limes. This gave rise to a nickname for
British sailors of limies.
Symptoms of scurvy include adrenal exhaustion,
bleeding gums, bleeding or hemorrhages into the tissues from weak capillaries,
and eventually breakdown of connective tissue everywhere in the body leading to
death.
Today, subclinical or mild scurvy occurs in some
people around the world who live on refined, cooked food diets with few fruits,
vegetables or fresh food. Symptoms
may include fatigue, depression, bleeding or fragile gums, and weak connective
tissue that can cause tendon, ligament, artery, vein
and skin problems. Other possible
symptoms are achy joints, rough skin, tooth decay and bone abnormalities and
deformities. Vitamin C deficiency
in infants may cause a rare megaloblastic anemia.
Overdose
symptoms. An acute overdose often causes
diarrhea, which remove the excess vitamin C. Chronic overuse of vitamin C can increase iron absorption,
which can be toxic. It also
depletes copper and many other vital minerals. This can severely unbalance body chemistry and even
contribute to illnesses such as gout, infertility (low copper), kidney stones
and cancer from its yin effect and mineral depletion.
When more is needed. Scurvy, pregnancy, breast feeding, heavy metal
toxicity (everyone has this to a degree), stress, trauma, allergies, old age,
high protein diets, and infections of many kinds.
Vitamin C is a
powerful copper antagonist.
Copper oxidizes vitamin C.
Vitamin C chelates and helps remove copper, as
well as all the toxic metals.
Effect on the oxidation rate. Due to its action on the adrenal glands, vitamin C always enhances the
oxidation rate. More vitamin C is
found in the adrenals than anywhere else in the body.
VITAMIN
D
Vitamin
D is a fat-soluble and extremely important vitamin. It was discovered around 1920 as a factor in yeast and other
foods that would prevent a common disease of the time called rickets. Vitamin D is receiving much more
attention in the past five years because testing reveals that most people,
except young children, are low in vitamin D. This occurs in spite of living in a sunny climate and eating
dairy products enriched with vitamin D.
Sunscreens can reduce vitamin D synthesis by the skin.
Is vitamin D a
hormone? Some call vitamin D a
hormone because it seems to affect every body system. However, hormones are usually produced by
the body by a particular gland.
The kidney does produce the active form of vitamin D, but only if the
precursor is supplied from food, nutritional supplements or sunshine. Therefore, I would not call vitamin D a
hormone. Food sources. Among the best sources are fish liver
and especially fish liver oils.
Some salt water fish are also high in vitamin
D. Sources that are not quite as
high, but are very good include raw egg yolks and raw dairy products. It is easy to eat a raw egg yolk by
soft boiling, poaching or lightly frying an egg so the yolk remain runny.
Functions.
Vitamin D has many functions. A major one is to enhance calcium and
phosphorus absorption and utilization.
Others include bone health, immune response, cancer prevention,
cardiovascular health, and it is anti-inflammatory in a number of ways.
Deficiency
symptoms. Formerly, the main
deficiency diseases were rickets and osteomalacia. Rickets is a malformation or retarded
growth of the long bones, and low serum calcium and phosphorus. Osteomalacia
can lead to bone loss.
These diseases are not common today because
pasteurized milk is fortified with vitamin D by law. In the past 20 years or so, however, scientists have
discovered that although people are obtaining the minimum daily requirement of
vitamin D from their food and sunlight, more vitamin D is needed.
Subtle deficiency symptoms seem to be related to
excess cancers, heart disease, stroke, hypertension, autoimmune diseases,
diabetes, depression, chronic pain, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, muscle
weakness, muscle wasting, birth defects, periodontal disease, rheumatoid
arthritis, asthma, immune deficiency, weight gain, dementias and more vitamin D
may also protect against radiation damage.
When
more is needed. Most
adults need a supplement of about 5000 iu
daily. While
usually enough, more may help when breast feeding, with low sun exposure,
improper diet, and increasing age.
Children need less, in general.
The general toxicity of the body may be one factor in determining how
much vitamin D supplementation is needed.
VITAMIN
E
Vitamin
E is a fat-soluble and very important vitamin. It was discovered in 1922 and for a number of years was called Òfactor XÓ until it was later renamed vitamin
E. Vitamin E is actually a group
of factors called tocopherols and tocotrienols.
Food
Sources. Fortunately, vitamin E is found in many foods. Among the best sources are wheat germ,
soybean oil, many green and yellow vegetables, yeast, sunflower seeds,
margarine, and other foods.
Functions.
Vitamin E is a powerful anti-oxidant that, along with selenium and other
nutrients, protects cell membranes against oxidant damage. It also protects the delicate enzymes
in the mitochondria of the cells that are needed for energy production within
each cell.
Vitamin E is also essential for adrenal gland
activity, and for this reason, perhaps, tends to increase the oxidation or
metabolic rate in all cases. Other
functions include increasing the circulation and preventing certain birth
defects. Vitamin E is also
protective for the heart and arteries, and can prevent stroke damage if used
immediately after a stroke in large doses. The reason is probably that damage to the brain is due to
oxidants, and vitamin E helps prevent this damage.
Deficiency
symptoms. These include anemias, creatinuria, cystic fibrosis of the pancreas, oxidant
damage of the body, fatigue, impaired circulation, general poor health, poor
muscle development or muscle wasting, and asthma or other lung damage due to
polluted air.
When more is needed. Pregnancy, infancy, breathing polluted air, diets
of processed foods, diets high in polyunsaturated oils, and aging.
VITAMIN
F - THE ESSENTIAL FATTY ACIDS
The
essential fatty acids, sometimes called vitamin F, are linoleic,
linolenic, and arachadonic
acids, and perhaps others. These
were discovered over 100 years ago, but attracted little attention.
Today they are recognized as extremely important
nutrients. Most people are
deficient in one type of fatty acid called the omega-3 fatty acids. The reasons for this are:
á
Livestock are
no longer fed grass, and are instead often raised entirely on grain that is low
in omega-3 fatty acids. This
affects our commercial meats and our dairy products today. Only wild game, and grass fed meats and
dairy products have any appreciable amount of omega-3 fatty acids.
á
Pasteurization of dairy products destroys any omega-3 fatty acids
left in our dairy products.
á
Overcooking
meats and fats also destroys many omega-3 fatty acids.
á
The
substitution of cheap processed vegetable oils in the diet, such as corn or
soybean oil, instead of butter or lard has reduced the intake of omega-3 fatty
acids.
Food
sources. Among the best sources
are certain cold-water, salt-water fish such as sardines, salmon and tuna. Other sources are krill, wild game, and
raw or lightly cooked grass fed meats and dairy products.
Functions. The essential fatty acids are needed for cell
membrane function and prostaglandin synthesis, primarily.
Deficiency
symptoms. Common symptoms are
rough and dry skin, and mental symptoms such as anxiety, depression,
irritability ADD, ADHD, and many others.
Delayed or impaired mental development of children is a serious symptom
that may be related to omega-3 deficiency in the mother and in breast
milk. Baby formula often does not
contain enough omega-3 fatty acids for optimum brain development and must be
supplemented.
Impaired cell membrane permeability may cause a
wide variety of sometimes subtle health conditions from malnutrition and
fatigue to severe problems such as cancers.
Another important symptom is inflammation, which
can manifest as hundreds of symptoms such as arthritis, gastritis, arteritis, headaches, PMS, high blood pressure and many
others. Hormonal imbalances are
also often related to deficiencies of omega-3 fatty acids.
When more is needed. Most people need a daily omega-3 supplement. Pregnancy requires more, and children
must have enough to develop normally.
Anyone with inflammation, hormone imbalances, PMS and mental or
emotional conditions may need more.
Stress may cause an increased need as well.
VITAMIN
K
Vitamin
K is a fat-soluble vitamin involved in blood formation, blood clotting and bone
function that is found in some common vegetables, liver and kidney. It was discovered in 1929. The main forms are called K1 and K2.
Food
sources. While vitamin
K can be produced by intestinal bacteria, many peopleÕs intestinal
system is so deranged that they must obtain it from food. Rich sources include cooked cabbage,
cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, spinach, bean sprouts, alfalfa and soy oil. Other good sources are pork (which I do
not recommend eating as it may contain parasite eggs even if well cooked), beef
liver and beef kidney.
Functions.
Vitamin K is needed for blood clotting, cell growth and prevention of
osteoporosis. In lower animals it
also is required for energy production and in plants for photosynthesis, which
is also a form of energy production.
Deficiency
symptoms. The main one is bleeding
or hemorrhages, which can be fatal.
Deficiency increases the clotting time of the blood, or can prevent
clotting altogether, leading to hemorrhages. Symptoms may include easy bruising and bleeding that may be
manifested as nosebleeds, bleeding gums, blood in the urine, blood in the
stool, tarry black stools, or extremely heavy menstrual bleeding. The drug Coumadin or warfarin works by causing a vitamin K deficiency to Òthin
the bloodÓ. Taking a lot of
vitamin K can therefore interfere with the action of this drug.
When more is needed. Infancy, especially right after birth,
breastfeeding, improper diets, antibiotic use that destroys the intestinal flora,
and perhaps aging.
VITAMIN
P OR BIOFLAVOINOIDS
The
bioflavinoids are a large group of complex chemicals
that are sometimes considered as vitamins, although they may not be absolutely
essential for life. However, they
are very important nutrients for optimum health.
Many are pigments that give color to our fruits and
vegetables. The names of common
ones are quercitin, rutin, hesperidin, lutein, zeoxanthin, anthocyanadins, catachins, astaxanthin and some
others. All have anti-inflammatory
and other effects on the body, and are found in many foods.
Food sources. Very rich sources are the material
under the skin of citrus fruits, berries, gingko biloba,
red onions, parsley, whole grains such as blue and yellow corn, tea –
especially white and green tea, red wine and dark bitter chocolate.
Functions.
Bioflavinoids have anti-oxidant, anti-allergic,
anti-inflammatory, anti-microbial and anti-cancer activities. Much of this activity may be due to
their property of stabilizing capillaries and preventing capillary
fragility. They may be very
protective of the heart and the cardiovascular system, as well as protective of
most body systems.
Deficiency
symptoms. These include allergies,
inflammation, infections, poor general health and possibly cancers.
When more is needed. Inflammation, allergies, stress, pregnancy,
infancy, and perhaps other situations.
CAN
ONE TAKE TOO MUCH OF SOME VITAMINS
In theory, yes.
However, too little is the general rule today. Too much vitamin A, D, E or K can build up in the liver, but
it usually takes months for this to occur, and the effects go away when the
supplementation stops. Eskimos eat
fish liver and fish liver oil that is very high in vitamins A and D, and do not
seem to suffer any ill effects. I
have given people 100,000 iu
of natural vitamin A for up to a few months with no problems, though reports
exist in the medical literature of overdoses of vitamin A.
Too many B-complex vitamins are not that toxic, but
can speed up the oxidation rate too much.
This is quite a common problem and can occur just by eating too much
meat, in a few cases. Usually,
however, it is due to taking a high-potency B-complex supplement. Stopping the supplement causes the
symptoms of anxiety and irritability to disappear quickly in almost all
cases. High doses of some
B-complex vitamins causes the urine to turn a bright yellow. However, this is not toxic of itself.
Too much vitamin C lowers copper in the body too
much, and can chelate and remove many minerals such
as zinc, calcium, manganese and others.
This will only happen if the amount used exceeds about 2000 mg daily or
more for a few weeks or more.
Excessive vitamin C also causes diarrhea.
Too much vitamin D can cause lethargy. Some people who spend a few hours out
in the sun experience a mild form of this. I am not famliar with overdosing
on essential fatty acids or bioflavinoids, although I
suppose it is possible.
SYMPTOMATIC
VITAMIN USE VERSUS NUTRITIONAL BALANCING SCIENCE
Symptomatic
use. Today most doctors and
nutritionists use vitamins in a symptomatic way. This means that certain vitamins are recommended based upon
oneÕs symptoms. This is fine as
far as it goes. However, taking a
high dose of any vitamin or mineral for more than a few days can unbalance the
body chemistry and often lead to deficiencies of other vitamins by upsetting
the natural balance of vitamins in the body. Also, most vitamins are extremely yin in Chinese medical
terms. This is usually not very
helpful for overall health, even if the vitamin corrects a symptom.
Nutritional
balancing approach based on the stress theory of disease and oxidation types. Another way to recommend vitamins that
is safer and often much more effective utilizes hair mineral testing and the
method of interpretation of the hair mineral analysis of Dr. Paul Eck. This science is called nutritional
balancing. Based upon stress
theory and empirical work by Dr. George Watson, PhD, this method uses vitamins,
minerals and other substances to gently balance certain mineral ratios and
levels as revealed on a hair mineral test.
While not always as good for rapid symptom removal,
nutritional balancing is far safer, and often much more effective in the long
run to improve overall health.
High doses of vitamins, also called megadosing
or pharmacological doses, are never used so the chance of unbalancing the body
is minimized. Also, the
practitioner does not need to recommend ten or more single vitamins or
minerals, as they are supplied together in the right proportions in a
Òmetabolic packÓ for oneÕs oxidation type. Experience shows that the balance of the vitamins, like the
balance of the minerals, is the key.
FOOD-BASED
VERSUS SYNTHESIZED VITAMINS
Some
believe that only food-based vitamins should be used as they are better absorbed and utilized. This is not my experience at all. In fact, food-based vitamins, while very good at times, can
cause problems due to the food from which they are made, their cost, their low
potency, and other problems with their use. This subject is discussed in detail in a separate article
entitled Food-Based Supplements.
INTRAVENOUS
AND OTHER VITAMIN DELIVERY METHODS
Most
vitamins are well-absorbed when taken by mouth. Vitamin B12 may need to be taken
intramuscularly if a person cannot absorb it well orally.
Some
holistic doctors use intravenous vitamin ÒdripsÓ to push a lot of vitamins into
the body quickly. This is
necessary with some such as vitamin C, as large doses will cause diarrhea. It is also helpful for some people who
are very deficient in vitamins.
However, overall, I do not use this method and would discourage it.
The buffering systems of the body limit the amount
of vitamins and other nutrients that will be absorbed in the intestines. If possible, I prefer to honor this
system and use it. Circumventing
the bodyÕs natural buffering system with vitamin shots and drips can easily
lead to severe imbalances in the body if the process is repeated for several
months or longer.
VITAMIN-MINERAL
LINKS
Some
vitamins work very closely with certain minerals, organs or glands in the
body. The following relationships
are often the most important:
Vitamin
A – zinc, the eyes
B1 -
manganese, thyroid and adrenal glands
B1,
B3, B5, B6 - sodium
B5
– the adrenal glands
B6 -
magnesium
Choline
- magnesium and calcium
Inositol - lithium
C
– may increase iron, and lowers copper, the adrenal glands
D -
calcium, thyroid and parathyroid gland
E -
sodium, selenium
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