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Tue, 11 Mar 2003 14:50:00 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Does Your Heart Good

 

DOES YOUR HEART GOOD

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

March 11, 2003

 

**************************************************************

 

Dear Reader,

 

Last week I told you about the difficulty your body has in

absorbing calcium ( " Skinny Dipping " 3/4/03) - an important

factor when you're trying to lose weight, because an

increased calcium intake can help take off the pounds.

 

This week calcium is on the agenda again with a new study

that has important information about a vitamin that can help

regulate calcium levels in heart muscle cells. It's a

win/win situation: good for weight-loss, and good for the

heart.

 

-----------------------------

Calcium rules and regs

-----------------------------

 

Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) occurs when the expansion and

contraction of heart muscle cells is impaired, reducing the

heart's ability to pump blood throughout the body. Because

previous research on animals has demonstrated the

possibility that low levels of vitamin D may play a role in

heart failure, Researchers at the Department of Nutrition

Science, University of Bonn, Germany, designed their study

to examine the effect of vitamin D on human hearts.

 

Over a period of five months, fasting blood samples were

collected from 54 CHF patients. Their samples were compared

to similar samples taken from a group of 34 healthy subjects

that did not have CHF.

 

An analysis of the samples revealed that the group of 54 CHF

patients had vitamin D levels significantly lower than the

healthy group. In fact some in the CHF group had D levels

that were only half of the average level found in the other

group. Furthermore, those with the lowest vitamin D levels

tended to have the most severe symptoms of CHF.

 

Because impaired calcium metabolism is known to contribute

to the dysfunction of heart muscles, the Bonn researchers

concluded that their study helps confirm that vitamin D may

have an important effect in regulating the calcium levels

within the muscle cells of the heart.

 

-----------------------------

How much - and from where?

-----------------------------

 

This Bonn research is the most recent in a series of studies

that illustrate the importance of vitamin D in heart health.

In an e-Alert I sent you last year ( " D's Day " 4/30/02), I

told you about a University of California, San Francisco,

study that showed how vitamin D may cut the risk of heart

disease in older women by as much as one-third, primarily

due to the ability of vitamin D to prevent the buildup of

calcium deposits in the arteries.

 

Mainstream authorities, including the American Heart

Association, continue to insist that you don't need to

supplement with vitamin D. But studies like these confirm

the benefits that nutritionally oriented physicians have

known about for years.

 

In the February 2002 issue of Nutrition and Healing

newsletter, Dr. Jonathan Wright makes clear the profound

importance of vitamin D: " Although the final proof isn't in

(and probably won't be in our lifetimes), it's very likely

that if you're over 40 and supplement your diet with a

generous amount of vitamin D, you can lower your risk of

prostate, breast, and bowel cancer along with your risk

of 'essential' hypertension, osteoporosis, and tuberculosis.

Young adults can lower their risk of multiple sclerosis as

well. "

 

Dr. Wright recommends a daily vitamin D intake between 1600

and 2000 IUs - and as much as 4000 IUs for those of us over

40. According to Dr. Wright, it's impossible for most people

to get enough vitamin D from the sun alone - and he

discourages the use of dairy products because of the many

other health concerns they raise. Instead, he suggests other

food sources like salmon and sardines - or even good old-

fashioned cod liver oil, which provides over 1300 IUs of

vitamin D per tablespoon.

 

If you'd like to learn more about Dr. Wright's

recommendations on vitamin D from his February 2002

newsletter, click here for free access

http://www.wrightnewsletter.com/misc/nah_0202.shtml

 

One of the true groundbreakers in the research and

development of effective alternative therapies, Dr. Wright

has been practicing natural and nutritional medicine since

1973 - often vilified by the medical mainstream, but honored

by his peers as the first recipient of the Linus Pauling

Award for Lifetime Achievement in Natural Medicine. You can

find out more about Dr. Wright and his monthly newsletter,

Nutrition & Healing, by clicking here.

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/NAH/WNAHD334

 

**************************************************************

 

....and another thing

 

HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D., sent me an insightful

response to the two ephedra e-Alerts from last week ( " Ban

The Torpedoes " 3/3/03, and " Choose Your Poison " 3/6/03).

 

Dr. Spreen writes:

 

" I have another comment about Ephedra. It's mighty funny

that this herbal agent gets all the bad press, especially

when its milligram content of active ingredient is very low.

What's even funnier is the fact that nobody has mentioned a

common, over-the-counter (OTC) drug that's a pure compound

of the same drug class. Pseudoephedrine is just what the

name suggests- 'pseudo', meaning a synthetic form of

ephedrine, in this case chemically identified as

pseudoephedrine hydrochloride, and defined in Dorland's

Medical Dictionary as 'An adrenergic agent.' It can be

bought in any quantity, from any drugstore, as the popular

brand name 'Sudafed'.

 

" Funnier still (if you think any of this is funny) is the

fact that each OTC tablet contains 30 milligrams of the

drug, and the label allows up to 240 milligrams daily 'as a

decongestant,' though it's a stimulant, pure and simple, and

not only truckers but many others have known about its use

along that line for years.

 

" To get 240 milligrams of ephedrine from the herb you'd have

to be one aggressive son-of-a-gun and be taking it like

candy. It would be (and it IS) much easier to get the same

effect from far fewer tablets of the commonly available drug.

 

" Why isn't anyone suggesting a heart warning on Sudafed

labels? This wouldn't have anything to do with big money

pharmaceutical interests nudging out the competition now,

would it? "

 

Last week, Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy

Thompson joined the mainstream chorus calling for stricter

controls of the public's access to ephedra, saying, " I don't

know why anyone would take these products. Why take the

risk? "

 

I wonder if Secretary Thompson's home medicine cabinet

contains a box of Sudafed or Tylenol Sinus or any number of

other very popular OTC products that contain

pseudoephedrine? And, if so, why would he take the risk?

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

Sources:

" Vitamin D May Cut Women's Heart Disease Death Risk " Reuters

Health, 4/24/02

" Vitamin D Treats Congestive Heart Failure " Dr. Joseph

Mercola, 3/5/03, mercola.com

" Low Vitamin D Status: A Contributing Factor in the

Pathogenesis of Congestive Heart Failure? " Journal of the

American College of Cardiology, 2003 Jan 1;41(1):105-12

 

Copyright ©1997-2003 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request, please

click here http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.shtml

 

**************************************************************

 

 

**************************************************************

If you'd like to participate in the HSI Forum, search past

e-Alerts and products or you're an HSI member and would like

to search past articles, visit http://www.hsibaltimore.com

 

**************************************************************

To learn more about HSI, call (203) 699-4416 or visit

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/HSI/WHSIC313/home.cfm.

 

**************************************************************

 

 

Gettingwell- / Vitamins, Herbs, Aminos, etc.

 

To , e-mail to: Gettingwell-

Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell

 

 

 

 

Web Hosting - establish your business online

 

 

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  • 7 months later...

DOES YOUR HEART GOOD

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

**************************************************************

 

Dear Reader,

 

Last week I told you about the difficulty your body has in absorbing calcium

( " Skinny Dipping " 3/4/03) - an important factor when you're trying to lose

weight, because an increased calcium intake can help take off the pounds.

 

This week calcium is on the agenda again with a new study that has important

information about a vitamin that can help regulate calcium levels in heart

muscle cells. It's a win/win situation: good for weight-loss, and good for

the heart.

 

----------------------------- Calcium rules

and regs

-----------------------------

 

Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) occurs when the expansion and contraction of

heart muscle cells is impaired, reducing the heart's ability to pump blood

throughout the body. Because previous research on animals has demonstrated

the possibility that low levels of vitamin D may play a role in heart

failure, Researchers at the Department of Nutrition Science, University of

Bonn, Germany, designed their study to examine the effect of vitamin D on

human hearts.

 

Over a period of five months, fasting blood samples were collected from 54

CHF patients. Their samples were compared to similar samples taken from a

group of 34 healthy subjects that did not have CHF.

 

An analysis of the samples revealed that the group of 54 CHF patients had

vitamin D levels significantly lower than the healthy group. In fact some in

the CHF group had D levels that were only half of the average level found in

the other group. Furthermore, those with the lowest vitamin D levels tended

to have the most severe symptoms of CHF.

 

Because impaired calcium metabolism is known to contribute to the

dysfunction of heart muscles, the Bonn researchers concluded that their

study helps confirm that vitamin D may have an important effect in

regulating the calcium levels within the muscle cells of the heart.

 

----------------------------- How much -

and from where?

-----------------------------

 

This Bonn research is the most recent in a series of studies that illustrate

the importance of vitamin D in heart health. In an e-Alert I sent you last

year ( " D's Day " 4/30/02), I told you about a University of California, San

Francisco, study that showed how vitamin D may cut the risk of heart disease

in older women by as much as one-third, primarily due to the ability of

vitamin D to prevent the buildup of calcium deposits in the arteries.

 

Mainstream authorities, including the American Heart Association, continue

to insist that you don't need to supplement with vitamin D. But studies like

these confirm the benefits that nutritionally oriented physicians have known

about for years.

 

In the February 2002 issue of Nutrition and Healing newsletter, Dr. Jonathan

Wright makes clear the profound importance of vitamin D: " Although the final

proof isn't in

(and probably won't be in our lifetimes), it's very likely that if you're

over 40 and supplement your diet with a generous amount of vitamin D, you

can lower your risk of prostate, breast, and bowel cancer along with your

risk of 'essential' hypertension, osteoporosis, and tuberculosis. Young

adults can lower their risk of multiple sclerosis as well. "

 

Dr. Wright recommends a daily vitamin D intake between 1600 and 2000 IUs -

and as much as 4000 IUs for those of us over

40. According to Dr. Wright, it's impossible for most people to get enough

vitamin D from the sun alone - and he discourages the use of dairy products

because of the many other health concerns they raise. Instead, he suggests

other food sources like salmon and sardines - or even good old- fashioned

cod liver oil, which provides over 1300 IUs of vitamin D per tablespoon.

 

If you'd like to learn more about Dr. Wright's recommendations on vitamin D

from his February 2002 newsletter, click here for free access

http://www.wrightnewsletter.com/misc/nah_0202.shtml

 

One of the true groundbreakers in the research and development of effective

alternative therapies, Dr. Wright has been practicing natural and

nutritional medicine since

1973 - often vilified by the medical mainstream, but honored by his peers as

the first recipient of the Linus Pauling Award for Lifetime Achievement in

Natural Medicine. You can find out more about Dr. Wright and his monthly

newsletter, Nutrition & Healing, by clicking here.

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/NAH/WNAHD334

 

**************************************************************

 

.... and another thing

 

HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M. D., sent me an insightful response to the two

ephedra e-Alerts from last week ( " Ban The Torpedoes " 3/3/03, and " Choose

Your Poison " 3/6/03).

 

Dr. Spreen writes:

 

" I have another comment about Ephedra. It's mighty funny that this herbal

agent gets all the bad press, especially when its milligram content of

active ingredient is very low. What's even funnier is the fact that nobody

has mentioned a common, over-the-counter (OTC) drug that's a pure compound

of the same drug class. Pseudoephedrine is just what the name suggests-

'pseudo', meaning a synthetic form of ephedrine, in this case chemically

identified as pseudoephedrine hydrochloride, and defined in Dorland's

Medical Dictionary as 'An adrenergic agent.' It can be bought in any

quantity, from any drugstore, as the popular brand name 'Sudafed'.

 

" Funnier still (if you think any of this is funny) is the fact that each OTC

tablet contains 30 milligrams of the drug, and the label allows up to 240

milligrams daily 'as a decongestant,' though it's a stimulant, pure and

simple, and not only truckers but many others have known about its use along

that line for years.

 

" To get 240 milligrams of ephedrine from the herb you'd have to be one

aggressive son-of-a-gun and be taking it like candy. It would be (and it IS)

much easier to get the same effect from far fewer tablets of the commonly

available drug.

 

" Why isn't anyone suggesting a heart warning on Sudafed labels? This

wouldn't have anything to do with big money pharmaceutical interests nudging

out the competition now, would it? "

 

Last week, Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson joined the

mainstream chorus calling for stricter controls of the public's access to

ephedra, saying, " I don't know why anyone would take these products. Why

take the risk? "

 

I wonder if Secretary Thompson's home medicine cabinet contains a box of

Sudafed or Tylenol Sinus or any number of other very popular OTC products

that contain pseudoephedrine? And, if so, why would he take the risk?

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson Health Sciences Institute

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