Insulin
(The most
amazing thing I have read on insulin to date. It
is basically a transcription of a lecture given
by Dr. Rosedale at Designs for Health
Institute's BoulderFest 1999 - Tamarah)
Case
Histories
By-Pass
Surgery
First, let's talk about a
couple of case histories. These are actual
patients that I've seen; let's start with
patient A. This patient saw me one afternoon and
said that he had literally just signed himself
out of the hospital "AMA," or against
medical advice. Like in the movies, he had
ripped out his IVs.
The next day he was scheduled
to have his second by-pass surgery. He had been
told that if he did not follow through with this
surgery, within two weeks he would be dead. He
couldn't even walk from the car to the office
without severe chest pain.
He was on 102 units of insulin
and his blood sugars were 300 plus. He was on
eight different medications for various things.
But his first by-pass surgery was such a
miserable experience that he said he would
rather die than go through the second one. He
came to me because he had heard that I might be
able to prevent this.
To make a long story short,
this gentleman right now is on no insulin. I
first saw him three and a half years ago. He
plays golf four or five times a week. He is on
no medications whatsoever, he has no chest pain,
and he has not had any surgery. He started an
organization called "Heart Support of
America" to educate people about the
alternatives to by-pass surgery that have
nothing to do with surgery or medication. That
organization, as he last told me, had a mailing
list of over a million people.
High
Triglycerides/Cholesterol
Patient B is a 42-year-old man
who was referred by patient A. He had a
triglyceride level of 2200, a cholesterol level
of 950 and was on maximum doses of all his
medications. He was not fat at all; he was
fairly thin.
This man was told that he had
familial hyperlipidema and that he had better
get his affairs in order, because if that was
what his lipids were despite the best
medications with the highest doses, he was in
trouble.
Whenever I see a patient on
any of those medications, they're off the very
first visit. They have no place in medicine. He
was taken off the medications and in six weeks
his lipid levels, both his triglycerides and his
cholesterol, were hovering around 220. After six
more weeks, they were both under 200, off of the
medications. As I said earlier, they have no
place in medicine.
I should mention that this
patient had a CPK that was quite elevated. It
was circled on the lab report that he had
brought in initially with a question mark by it
because they didn't know why. The reason why was
because he was eating off his muscles--if you
take (gemfibrozole) and any of the HMG co-enzyme
reductase inhibitors together, this is a common
side effect, which is in the PDR; they shouldn't
be given together.
So, he was chewing up his
muscles, including his heart, which they were
trying to treat. If indeed he were going to die,
it would be that treatment that would kill him.
Severe
Osteoporosis
Let's go to something totally
different--a lady with severe osteoporosis. This
fairly young woman was almost three standard
deviations below the norm in both the hip
femeral neck and the cervical vertebrae and was
very worried about getting a fracture. She was
put on a high-carbohydrate diet and told that
this would be of benefit. She was also placed on
estrogen, which is a fairly typical treatment.
They wanted to put her on some
other medicines, but she wanted to know if there
was an alternative. Although we didn't have as
dramatic a turn around in this case, we did take
her off the estrogen she was on and got her to
one standard deviation below the norm in a year.
Severe
Angina of the Leg
Claudication, that is, severe
angina of the leg when you walk (this is the
same thing as angina of the heart, except of the
leg), is characterized by pain in the legs after
walking a certain distance.
My stepfather had extremely
severe claudication. It was a typical case; he
would walk about fifty yards and then get
severe, crampy pain in his legs. He was going to
see the best doctors in Chicago, but they
couldn't figure out what was wrong with him
initially.
For example, he went to a
neurologist who thought it might be neurological
pain or back pain. Finally, he went to a
vascular surgeon who thought it was vascular
disease, so they did an arthrogram--sure enough
he had severe vascular disease. They wanted to
do the by-pass surgery that is typically done
for this, and he was considering it because he
had a trip planned to Europe in two weeks, and
he wanted to be able to walk around.
Ten years prior he'd had an
angioplasty for heart disease. At the time I’d
told him to change his diet, but of course he
didn't. This time, however, he listened. I said
that if he did exactly as I told him, he could
avoid the by-pass and be walking just fine in
two weeks. Modulating this one aspect of his
disease--I have never seen it fail--works very
quickly to open up the artery.
High Cancer Risk
This patient had a mother and
sister who had both died of breast cancer. I put
her on the exact same treatment as the other
cases I just mentioned, because they all had the
same thing wrong with them.
A Problem
with Typical Treatments
What would be the typical
treatment of cardiovascular disease? First they
check the cholesterol. To treat high cholesterol
(over 200) they put you on cholesterol lowering
drugs, which shut off your CoQ10. What does
CoQ10 do? It is involved in the energy
production and protection of little energy
furnaces in every cell, so energy production
goes way down.
A common side effect of people
who are on all these HMG co-enzyme reductase
inhibitors is that their arms feel heavy. Well,
the heart is a muscle too, and it's going to
feel heavy too.
One of the best treatments for
a weak heart is CoQ10 (for congestive heart
failure). But doctors have no trouble shutting
CoQ10 production off so that they can treat a
number.
The common therapy for
osteoporosis is drugs, and the common therapy
for calaudication is surgery. For cancer
reduction there is nothing.
But all of these have a common
cause--the same cause as three major avenues of
research in aging, one of which is called
caloric restriction.
Caloric
Restriction Research
There have been thousands of
studies done since the 1950s on caloric
restriction of laboratory animals. If you
restrict calories but maintain a high level of
nutrition, called CRONs (Caloric Restriction
with Optimal Nutrition), or adequate nutrition,
CRANs (Caloric Restriction with Adequate
Nutrition), these animals can live anywhere
between 30 percent and 200 percent longer,
depending on the species.
Researchers have tested
caloric restriction on several dozen species,
and the results are uniform throughout. They are
doing it on primates now, and it seems to
working with primates, though we won't know for
sure for about another 10 years.
Centenarian
studies
There are three major
centenarian studies going on around the world.
They are trying to find the variable that would
confer longevity among this group of people who
live to be 100 years old. Why do centenarians
become centenarians? Why are they so lucky? Is
it because they have low cholesterol, exercise a
lot and live a healthy, clean life?
Well, the oldest person ever
recorded was Jean Calumet of France who died
last year at 122 years of age. She smoked all of
her life and drank.
What researchers are finding
from these major centenarian studies is that
there is hardly anything in common among these
people. They have high cholesterol and low
cholesterol, some exercise and some don't, some
smoke, some don't. Some are nasty as can be,
some nice and calm and some are ornery.
But, they all have relatively
low sugar for their age, and they all have low
triglycerides for their age.
And, they all have relatively
low insulin.
A Common
Cause
Insulin is the common
denominator in everything I've just talked
about. They way to treat cardiovascular disease
and the way I treated my stepfather, the way I
treated the high risk cancer patient, and the
osteoporosis and high blood pressure. The way to
treat virtually all of the so-called chronic
diseases of aging is to treat insulin itself.
The other major avenue of
research in aging has to do with genetic studies
of so-called lower organisms. We know the
genetics involved. We've got the entire genes
mapped out of several species of yeast and worms
now. We think of life span as being fixed, sort
of.
Humans tend to have an average
life span of 76 years, and the maximum lifespan
was this French lady at 122 years. In humans we
feel this length of time is relatively fixed,
but in lower forms of life it is very plastic.
Lifespan is strictly a variable depending on the
environment. Other species can live two weeks,
two years or sometimes 20 years depending on
what they want themselves to do, which depends
very much on the environment.
If there is a lot of food
around they are going to reproduce quickly and
die quickly, if not they will just bide their
time until conditions are better. We know now
that the variability in lifespan is regulated by
insulin.
Often it is thought that
insulin’s role is strictly to lower blood
sugar. I once had a patient list off about eight
drugs she was on and not even mention insulin.
Insulin is not treated as a drug. In fact, in
some places you don't even need a prescription,
you can just get it over the counter, it's
treated like candy.
Insulin is found in even
single-celled organisms and has been around for
several billion years. Its purpose, in some
organisms, is to regulate lifespan. The way
genetics works is that genes are not replaced,
they are built upon. We have the same genes as
everything that came before us--we just have
more of them.
We have added books to our
genetic library, but our base is the same. What
we are finding is that we can use insulin to
regulate lifespan too.
Aging is a
Disease
If there is a single marker
for lifespan, as they are finding in the
centenarian studies, it is insulin, specifically
insulin sensitivity.
How sensitive are your cells
to insulin? When they are not sensitive, the
insulin levels go up. Who has heard of the term
insulin resistance?
Insulin resistance is the
basis of all of the chronic diseases of aging,
because the disease itself is actually aging.
We know now that aging is a
disease. The other case studies that I
mentioned, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis,
obesity, diabetes, cancer, all the so-called
chronic diseases of aging and auto-immune
diseases, those are symptoms.
If you have a cold and you go
to the doctor, you have a runny nose. I did Ear,
Nose and Throat (ENT) for 10 years so I know
what the common treatment for that is, a
decongestant. I can't tell you how many patients
I saw who had been given Sudafed by their family
doctors for a cold who then came to see me
afterward because of a really bad sinus
infection.
What happens when you treat
the symptom of a runny nose from a cold and you
take a decongestant? Well, it certainly
decongests you by shutting off the mucus, but
why do you have the mucus? It’s because your
body is trying to clean and wash out the
membranes. What else is in mucus? Secretory IgA,
a very strong antibody to kill the virus. If
there is no mucus, there is no secretory IgA.
Decongestants also constrict
blood vessels, the little capillaries, or
arterioles, that go to those capillaries, and
the cilia, the little hair-like projections that
beat to push mucus along to create a stream.
They get paralyzed because they don't have blood
flow, so there is no more ciliary movement.
What happens if you dam a
stream and create a pond?
In days you've got larvae
growing, but if the stream is moving, you are
fine. You need a constant stream of mucus to get
rid of and prevent an infection. I am going into
this in some detail because in almost all cases,
if you treat a symptom you are going to make the
disease worse. The symptom is there as your
body's attempt to heal itself.
Now, the medical profession is
continually segregating more and more symptoms
into diseases--they call the symptoms diseases.
Using ENT for example, a patient will walk out
of the office with a diagnosis of Rhinitis,
which is inflammation of the nose. Is there a
reason why that patient has inflammation of the
nose? I think so. Wouldn't that underlying cause
be the disease as opposed to the descriptive
term of Rhinitis or Pharyngitis?
Someone can have the same
virus and have Rhinitis, Pharyngitis or
Sinusitis. They can have all sorts of "itis's,"
which is a descriptive term for inflammation.
That is what the code will be, and that is what
the disease will be. So they treat what they
think is the disease, but which actually is just
a symptom.
The same thing happens with
cholesterol. If you have high cholesterol it is
called hypercholesterolemia.
Hypercholesterolemia has become the code for the
disease when it is only the symptom. So doctors
treat that symptom, and what are they doing to
the heart? Messing it up.
What you have to do if you are
going to treat any disease is get to the root of
the disease. If you keep pulling a dandelion out
by its leaves, you are not going to get very
far. But the problem is that we don't know what
the root is.
The root is known in many
other areas of science, but the problem is that
medicine really isn't a science; it is a
business (but I don't want to get into that, we
could talk for hours).
You really need to look at the
root of what is causing the problem. We can use
that cold as a further example.
Why does that person have a
cold?
If he saw the doctor, the
doctor might tell him to take an antibiotic
along with the decongestant. You see this all
the time because the doctor wants to get rid of
the patient. In almost all cases of an upper
respiratory infection, it is a virus, and the
antibiotic is going to do worse than nothing,
because it is going to kill the bacterial flora
in the gut and impair the immune system, making
the immune system worse.
The patient might see someone
else more knowledgeable who will say, “No, you
caught a virus, don't do anything, go home and
sleep, let your body heal itself.” That's
better. You might see someone else who would ask
why you caught a virus without being out there
trying to hunt for viruses with a net. We are
breathing viruses every day; right now we are
breathing viruses, cold viruses and
rhinoviruses.
So why doesn't everybody catch
a cold tomorrow?
The Chinese will tell you that
it is because the milieu has to be right, if the
Chinese were to quote the French. Your body has
to be receptive to that virus--only if your
immune system is depressed will it allow that
virus to take hold.
So maybe a depressed immune
system is the disease. You can be given a bunch
of vitamin C because your immune system is
depressed and it is likely that the person has a
vitamin C deficiency. That's where most of us
are at right now, where we would recommend a
bunch of vitamin C to try to pick up the immune
system.
But why is the vitamin C not
working? Vitamin C is made in almost all living
mammals except humans and a couple of other
species. Vitamin C is made directly from glucose
and actually has a similar structure; they
compete for one another.
It has been known for many
decades that sugar depresses the immune system.
It was only in the 70s that they found out that
vitamin C was needed by white blood cells so
that they could phagocytize bacteria and
viruses. White blood cells require a fifty times
higher concentration, at least inside the cell
as outside, so they have to accumulate vitamin
C.
There is something called a
phagocytic index, which tells you how rapidly a
particular macrophage or lymphocyte can gobble
up a virus, bacteria or cancer cell. In the 70s
Linus Pauling knew that white blood cells needed
a high dose of vitamin C and that is when he
came up with his theory that you need high doses
of vitamin C to combat the common cold.
But if we know that vitamin C
and glucose have similar chemical structure,
what happens when sugar levels go up? They
compete for one another upon entering the cells.
And the thing that mediates the entry of vitamin
C into the cells is the same thing that mediates
the entry of glucose into the cells. If there is
more glucose around then less vitamin C will be
allowed into the cell, and it doesn't take much
glucose to have this effect. A blood sugar value
of 120 reduces the phagocytic index 75 percent.
Here we are getting a little
bit further down into the roots of disease. It
doesn't matter what disease you are talking
about, whether you are talking about a common
cold or cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis or
cancer, the root is always going to be at the
molecular and cellular level, and I will tell
you that insulin is going to have its hand in
it, if not totally control it.
What is the
purpose of insulin?
As I mentioned earlier, in
some organisms it is to control their lifespan.
What is the purpose of insulin in humans? Your
doctor will say that it's to lower blood sugar,
but I will tell you right now that that is a
trivial side effect. Insulin's evolutionary
purpose as is known right now, we are looking at
other possibilities, is to store excess
nutrients.
We come from a time of feast
and famine when if we couldn't store the excess
energy during times of feasting, we would not be
here because all of our ancestors encountered
famine. We are only here because our ancestors
were able to store nutrients, which they were
able to do because they were able to elevate
their insulin in response to any elevation in
energy that the organism encountered.
When your body notices that
sugar is elevated, it is a sign that you've got
more than you need; you’re not burning it so
it is accumulating in your blood. So insulin
will be released to take that sugar and store
it. How does it store it? Glycogen?
Your body stores very little
glycogen at any one time. All the glycogen
stored in your liver and muscle wouldn’t last
you through one active day. Once you fill up
your glycogen stores that sugar is stored as
saturated fat, 98 percent of which is palmitic
acid.
So the idea of the medical
profession recommending a high
complex-carbohydrate, low-saturated-fat diet is
an absolute oxymoron. A
high-complex-carbohydrate diet is nothing but a
high-glucose diet, or a high-sugar diet. Your
body is just going to store it as saturated fat,
and the body makes it into saturated fat quite
readily.
Insulin’s
Other Roles
Insulin doesn't just store
carbohydrates, by the way. Somebody mentioned
that it is an anabolic hormone, and it
absolutely is. Body builders are injecting
themselves with insulin because it builds muscle
and stores protein.
Magnesium
A less known fact is that
insulin also stores magnesium. But if your cells
become resistant to insulin, you can't store
magnesium so you lose it through urination.
Part 2

