by
Dr. Lawrence Wilson
© June 2018, 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.
Affects Millions
Yeast In The Brain
Brain Diabetes
Pharmaceutical or Recreational Drug Use
Malnutrition
Toxic Metals Or Toxic Chemicals
Impaired Circulation
Infections
Physical Or Mental Inactivity
Other
Nutritional Balancing
Other Instructions
Spiritual Aspects
Brain Fog
Affects millions of people. AlzheimerÕs disease and other dementias are costly, debilitating and heartbreaking conditions affecting millions of people worldwide. The incidence of dementias is also expected to increase drastically in the next 10-20 years. Therefore, anything that can be done to prevent or reverse dementias is worth doing.
Conventional medical doctors often do not know the cause for dementia. However, many cases of dementia can be stopped, prevented, and some can be reversed with nutritional methods. This may sound amazing, but it is simply applied biochemistry.
1. Yeast in the brain. Chronic yeast infections are common today due to copper imbalance and a diet containing sugars. Foods that contain sugars, including all fruit and fruit juices, tend to feed yeast in the body.
Yeasts, such as candida albicans
and others, secrete alcohol and acetaldehyde, which are highly toxic for the
brain. For more, please read Candida Albicans Infection on this site.
2. So-called brain diabetes. This interesting condition consists of an inability of the brain to utilize glucose properly. As a result, the brain basically starves. This causes a progressive dementia that is very severe and will end in death if it is not reversed promptly.
The good news is that this type of dementia is quite easy to stop and actually reverse completely. The secret is to take at least 2 heaping tablespoons of MCT oil or coconut oil every day, without fail. MCT stands for medium chain triglycerides. These special fats will nourish a brain that cannot utilize glucose properly. As a result, the cells in the brain will become properly nourished and the dementia will go away, especially if it is done before it progresses too far. If there is actual brain cell death, recovery will not be as complete, but there will be some improvement.
A vicious cycle is common with
this type of dementia. As the
brain starves for fuel or glucose, the person wants to eat more food. Usually, one eats the wrong food, and
this causes weight gain and causes more stress on the sugar-handling systems of
the body. As a result, the Ôbrain
diabetesÕ becomes even worse, and this, in turn, increases the craving for
food. The result is weight gain,
metabolic syndrome, and worsening diabetes. Drug such as insulin and oral diabetic medication do not
heal this condition, which has to do with nutrition and deeper metabolic
disturbances. For more, please
read Diabetes on this site.
3. Pharmaceutical or recreational drug use. Toxicity from medications of all sorts, even over-the-counter remedies, can have powerful damaging effects on the nervous system.
Marijuana reduces the intelligence quota and shortens life.
Many drugs reduce vitamin levels. Others interfere with digestion and elimination. Others damage the liver or kidneys, impairing general health. Others slow the circulation of the blood and this can affect circulation to the brain.
Some high blood pressure drugs, for example, reduce the force of the heart. This successfully reduces blood pressure and may prevent a stroke. However, it can reduce blood flow to the brain as well.
Some heart medications, glaucoma drugs and others may do the same as high blood pressure medication. Any drug that reduces blood flow or heart stress may reduce circulation to the brain. This affects memory and other cognitive functions in most cases, to some degree.
Anesthesia drugs used in many operations often affect memory and cognition. For example, bypass surgery often causes some degree of memory and cognitive loss because this long surgery requires a lot of anesthesia.
Many other classes of drugs may have side effects that alter brain function. Contrary to what some people believe, most drugs remain in the body, to some degree, for years and perhaps forever, unless one makes a determined effort to remove them. Here are some steps to help reduce your drug usage:
a) Stop any drug that you really donÕt have to take. Surprisingly, many doctors prescribe drugs just for ÒcomfortÓ or other reasons that are not too important. Yet they all have side effects, one of which may be dementia.
b) Reduce your dosages as much as possible.
c) Read the side effects of all drugs you use, even over-the-counter drugs. Note if dementia, memory loss or some other brain abnormality is one of the side effects. If so, talk with your doctor about changing drugs to one that does not have this side effect.
Note that if you are taking combinations of drugs, the side effects cannot even be predicted, as there are so many possible combinations. I think it would be rare that anyone really needs to be taking more than one or two drugs. Many times, natural products will work as well or even better, and are often less costly as well.
For more details, please read Marijuana – A Bad Drug and Drug Problems on this site.
4. Malnutrition. This is another very common cause of dementia. Often it is a very subtle and insidious form of malnutrition in which one is eating regularly, but not digesting or absorbing food adequately. This is extremely common in older people today. Here is more information about this type of malnutrition of the older population:
á Slow and insidious (hidden).
á Causes no obvious visible signs and symptoms.
á Symptoms are usually confused with other diseases, since malnutrition can cause almost any symptom imaginable.
á Far more common than imagined. Indeed, it affects most people as they age.
á Often it does not matter much if one eats a ÒbalancedÓ or wholesome diet because it has to do with absorption and digestion of food, and not just the kind of food one eats.
Deficiency of B-complex vitamins, for example, can lead to dementia. This is well-known in the medical literature. However, most doctors do not insist on tests or B-vitamin shots, though they are very inexpensive and simple to give. These alone can cure an early case of dementia if this is the cause.
Vitamin B-12, in particular, is required for proper mental function. Deficiency symptoms include confusion, memory loss and other brain-related symptoms. It is a crime that this is not recognized more in the medical field, now totally dominated by drug use.
Prevention with B12. If a person is following a nutritional balancing program and taking GB-3 with every meal, I do not think a person needs supplementary vitamin B12. However, for those who are not on a nutritional balancing program, I recommend a vitamin B12 shot for everyone over the age of about 65 or 70, at least one per year or preferably more. This can help prevent dementia from lack of vitamin B12, which is often irreversible.
All seniors should also take extra vitamin B12 in tablet form or better, in sublingual lozenges, to offset the normal decline in the ability to absorb this vital vitamin. This would actually prevent many cases of dementia completely.
Why are most older people malnourished? There are several reasons why this is virtually an epidemic.
a) Most eat less food due to reduced hunger, reduced ability to chew food, and weaker digestion. This, alone, leads to malnutrition.
b) Most do not want to cook as much as previously. This means they eat out more frequently or eat more packaged, prepared meals. Both of these tend to be less nutritious than home-cooked meals.
c) Many do not digest food as well. This is due to age, use of pharmaceuticals, low enzymes or other conditions that affect digestion or the energy level. Poorer digestion means one will be less well nourished by oneÕs food.
d) Many do not even like eating any more. It is normal for appetite to decrease with age. One reason is a zinc deficiency. As explained above, many nutritional deficiencies become worse with age. This leads many seniors and even middle-aged people to reduce their eating quantity and quality.
e) More stress. Seniors often experience more stress because they are not as strong and resilient as when they were young. Stress from any source reduces digestive ability, while at the same time increases the need for vital nutrients.
f) TodayÕs food supply. Even if one eats enough of excellent food and can digest and absorb nutrients, todayÕs hybrid foods are not as healthful as that which was grown 50 or 100 years ago. Much more food is grown per acre today, but the mineral content of the food is also much lower. Thus one can slowly become malnourished even if one is eating well and the body can digest and absorb food correctly.
g) Vegetarian and raw food diets. These are harmful in the extreme, in my view, although I know some health authorities recommend them.
h) Failing to take nutritional supplements. Sadly, some doctors and media outlets falsely teach that nutritional supplements are not needed, or are harmful, when the truth is the exact opposite. A few recent studies questioned the value of nutritional supplements, but were poorly done and perhaps were rigged to produce negative results. Millions of pages of medical research, literally, performed over the past 70 years, support the use and amazing value of nutritional supplements.
5. Toxic metals and toxic chemicals. EveryoneÕs body accumulates more toxic substances as they age. This is due to:
a) Much more sluggish metabolism, and with age most peopleÕs kidneys, liver and bowel do not work as well.
b) Impaired nutrition. When one eats fewer essential minerals, the body absorbs more toxic metals from the environment.
c) Drug use. Many pharmaceutical items contain a little toxic metals such as mercury in flu shots and blood pressure drugs, aluminum in antacids, and so forth.
F) Food and other
environmental exposure. The worst
offender here is aluminum, which is directly associated in some studies with
memory loss and perhaps other dementia symptoms.
Aluminum. For example, excess aluminum is associated with AlzheimerÕs disease. When aluminum builds up in the brain, the brain shrinks or atrophies.
Aluminum is added to almost all municipal drinking water as a flocculating agent. This means it makes dirt clump and go to the bottom of the settling tank. As a result, some aluminum finds its way into all foods made with water such as beverages, breads, and cooked items of all types.
Aluminum is also added to table salt as an anti-caking agent. It is also found in anti-perspirants, antacids (except Tums), buffered Aspirin and some other over-the-counter products. Aluminum can also be acquired by contact with the metal in some occupations, for example. For more, please read Aluminum on this website.
Iron. Iron overload is becoming more common. Iron can build up in the brain, and cause dementia.
The causes of iron overload are excessive exposure to iron through eating too much red meat, white flour and some supplements. Mineral deficiencies and weakened adrenal glands may also contribute to the problem. For more details, please read Iron Toxicity on this website.
Other metals. Mercury,
copper and other metals can also accumulate in the brain and contribute to
dementia.
Toxic chemicals. Aspartame, Olestra and other toxic chemicals can cause symptoms of dementia. For more details, please read Toxic Metals and Toxic Chemicals on this site.
6. Impaired circulation to the brain. A common reason for this cause of dementia is arteriosclerosis affecting circulation to the brain. Another reason is inactivity, which reduces general circulation to some degree. Dehydration and heart problems may also contribute to impaired circulation to the brain.
All of these health conditions can be corrected with a nutritional balancing program. I do not recommend chelation therapy to improve circulation, although it can help. However, it is less effective and less safe than a nutritional balancing program. For more, please read Arteriosclerosis on this site.
7. Subtle infections in or near the brain. Some people have subtle infections in the ears, sinuses, teeth, or in the brain itself. Most of them give off toxins called endotoxins and/or exotoxins that can affect cognition, memory and other brain activities. Chronic infections can also be at locations distant from the brain, but their toxins circulate and will affect the brain. Most of them are not revealed on x-rays, blood tests or other medical scans.
These infections can
be bacterial, viral, fungal or parasitic.
As one ages, they can flare up because the bodyÕs ability to fight them
off declines.
8. Mental or physical inactivity. This has been shown to increase dementia in numerous medical studies. Even simple mental activity, such as doing crossword puzzles or even watching television, improves brain circulation to some degree.
9. Other. Rarely, a brain tumor or other disease can cause dementia. This should be ruled out.
1. Follow a complete nutritional balancing program. This type of program can help for dozens of reasons, literally. These include remineralizing the body, removing toxic metals, reducing toxic chemicals in the brain and nervous system, healing chronic infections, balancing key mineral ratios, restoring the sugar-handling system of the body, and restoring adaptive energy and vitality to the body.
I can only recommend doing a nutritional balancing program with any of the Approved Practitioners. This is important because the programs are not that simple to set up.
2. Here are some extra instructions for those following a nutritional
balancing program:
1) Take as little prescription and over-the-counter drugs, as humanly possible.
2) Use your mind, breathe deeply every day, and exercise a little each day.
3) In addition to the supplement program on a nutritional balancing program, the following simple nutritional supplements may help:
á Vitamin E, about 800-1200 iu daily of natural source vitamin E.
á Gingko biloba, an herb sold in most health stores. Quality varies, so ask for an excellent brand and perhaps try a few if you are not sure.
á Coenzyme Q-10, about 100 mg or more daily, preferably in a lozenge for best absorption. This is also sold in most health food stores.
For more advanced cases, following a nutritional balancing program may be difficult or impossible unless you have excellent care. To do a nutritional balancing program properly, a person with dementia will almost always require a lot of care, at least until cognitive function can be restored.
Some people, as they age, decide
they just do not want to be on planet earth any more. This is understandable, as their bodies are not working well
and life is just not much fun or productive as it once was. Many are confined to the house or
worse, in bed, and must be cared for by others, though the person wishes it
were not so.
Dementia can be a way that a
person Òtunes outÓ the world. This
is not ideal, but it is occurs, at times, as one ages. It is even more common today,
complicated by all the nutritional imbalances and toxic exposures discussed
above.
As a result, in some cases, one
must not only overcome the physical causes of dementia in order to restore
normal functioning, but also the emotional or spiritual reasons for the
condition. This can make
correction slow and less effective, and is a common problem in dealing with
dementias.
BRAIN FOG, MILD
COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT (MCI), AND DEMENTIA
At least 40% of the clients I
work with complain of brain fog.
It is a lack of clarity, inability to think clearly and think through
problems logically, and related problems.
Brain fog may be considered an
early form of dementia. It affects
millions of people at all ages – even young children, today. Fortunately, it is usually completely
reversible if the person will follow a complete nutritional balancing program.
Mild cognitive impairment is a
newer term that medical doctors are using to describe mild or early forms of
dementia. The causes, in my view,
are exactly the same as for other dementias listed above. Please read Brain
Fog on this website for much more information about this very common
condition.
References
An excellent longer article on
AlzheimerÕs with more references is available at:
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/11/19/vitamin-b12-helps-ward-off-alzheimers.aspx
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