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experiencelifemag.com
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Functional Wellness, Part 3: Digestive Health
A well-functioning digestive system is the cornerstone of good health.
Find out how the gut works, what makes it vulnerable - and what you can
do to keep your own digestive tract in tiptop shape.
By Mark Hyman, MD |
September 2008 |
How Your Gut Works
Enemies of a Healthy Gut
Fighting Food Allergies
How to Heal Your Gut
Your Gut - A Day at the Office
The Dangers of Acid-Blocking Drugs
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness
Editors’ note: For more than 15 years, celebrated author and pioneering medical
visionary Mark Hyman, MD, has been practicing and promoting a revolutionary
healthcare concept known as functional medicine. It’s a patient-centered (vs.
disease-centered) approach that focuses on identifying and addressing the root
causes of chronic health challenges as opposed to merely treating symptoms.
Functional medicine also emphasizes incorporating nutrition and lifestyle
solutions rather than relying exclusively on pharmaceutical and surgical
interventions. Experience Life is proud to bring you this six-part series in
which Dr. Hyman describes the emerging practice of functional medicine and
explains how it can improve your well-being. Digestive distress is hardly a topic for dinner-party conversation,
but the truth is, it’s surprisingly common. About one in three Americans suffers
from gut problems of various sorts. Two of the top seven best-selling drugs in
the United States are prescribed for gastrointestinal problems. And nearly half
of all visits to internists are for “functional bowel disorders,” such as reflux
and irritable bowel syndrome. Doctors use the word “functional” to describe
problems related to function — situations where the bowel simply isn’t working
properly — as opposed to “structural” disorders, which are something we can see
(e.g., blockages, punctures, malformations), and which therefore are often
considered more “real.” But functional gut disorders are equally real problems
with very real causes — and sometimes dire consequences. Considering how
many people suffer from these problems, you would think our sophisticated
medical system would have a clear understanding of the causes of irritable
bowel syndrome, constipation, diarrhea, reflux, inflammatory bowel disease and
other common digestive issues. You would think by now we’d have developed great
treatments to fix these problems. Unfortunately, our understanding of this
highly sophisticated and integral part of our body is still quite primitive,
despite the explosion of scientific research on what Science magazine has called
“the inner tube of life.” As it turns out, digestive problems aren’t just
digestive problems. They can cause many other seemingly unrelated diseases, a
fact that has escaped most people — including many doctors. Over the last 15
years of practice and research, I have found the gut to be the source of
inestimable suffering throughout the body. Yet, when you treat the digestive
problem, the other symptoms often improve. These treatments promise relief from
common “functional” gastrointestinal symptoms (and most allergic and autoimmune
diseases, which originate in the gut), but they’ve also proven effective against
illnesses ranging from depression and attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) to dementia and Parkinson’s disease. Sound crazy? Let me
tell you about one of my patients. She was 57 and had suffered for eight years
from severe, unrelenting eczema all over her body. She saw doctor after doctor
for this red, oozing, scaly, itchy rash. They gave her salves, lotions, steroids
and antibiotics. But they never addressed the underlying cause of her
problem. When she came to me, I learned she ate a high-sugar diet and
suffered from frequent yeast infections. She also had a leaky gut, which is
known in medical terms as “increased intestinal permeability” — in other words,
the gut-wall barrier was not working. Plus, she had developed 24 immunoglobulin
G (IgG) food allergies, and her stool lacked healthy bacteria and showed an
overgrowth of yeast. She also had very high blood antibodies against
yeast. The answer? I treated her skin by treating her gut. I asked her to
stop eating the foods to which she had reactions, told her to stop feeding the
yeast by cutting out sugar and refined carbohydrates, and helped her kill the
yeast in her gut with antifungal medications and herbs. Then I replenished the
healthy bacteria and healing gut nutrients. The result? Her eczema disappeared —
and it has never come back.
How Your Gut Works
Many people think of their digestive systems as a
series of tubes through which food is mechanically crushed and extruded. It’s
not as simple as that. Your gut’s health determines which nutrients are absorbed
and which toxins, allergens and microbes are repelled. As a result, it is
directly linked to the health of your entire body. Intestinal health could be
defined as the optimal digestion, absorption and assimilation of food. But that
is a big job that depends on many other factors. First, the bugs in your gut
function like a rainforest — a diverse and interdependent ecosystem. The 3
pounds of bacteria there include some 500 different species that act as a
chemical factory — helping you digest your food, produce vitamins, regulate
hormones, excrete toxins and produce healing compounds that keep your gut
healthy. But for you to be healthy, these bacteria must be in balance. Too
many of the wrong bugs, like parasites, yeasts and bad bacteria — or not enough
of the good bugs, like lactobacillus or bifidobacteria — can seriously damage
your health. (For more on good bugs and bad, see “Good Bacteria Welcome” in the
July/August 2007 archives.) Second, the gut is
delicate. Your entire immune system and the rest of your body are protected from
the toxic environment in the gut by only a one-cell-thick layer — the epithelium
— that covers a surface area the size of a tennis court! If that barrier is
damaged, you will get sick and your immune system will become overactive,
producing inflammation throughout the body. And then there’s your second
brain. That’s right, your second brain. Your gut literally contains its own
nervous system. In fact, the ”brain” in your gut contains more
neurotransmitters than the brain in your head. The intestinal nervous
system is wired back to your brain, and messages travel between the two. When
those messages are altered for any reason in any direction — from the brain to
the gut or the gut to the brain — your health will suffer. But wait, there’s
more: Your gut also has to dispose of all the toxins created as a byproduct of
your metabolism. If things get backed up, your entire body can become overrun
with toxins. Finally, in the midst of all of this, your gut must break down
all the food you eat, separate all the vitamins and minerals, and shuttle
everything across the epithelium into your bloodstream for you to stay healthy.
Enemies of a Healthy Gut
With such a delicate balance and so many ways
for things to go wrong, it’s no wonder that so many of us are sick. Even in a
perfect world, our gut has a hard time keeping things balanced. In the
challenging circumstances of real life, there’s seemingly no end to
the things that knock our digestive systems off balance. They include:
- A standard American diet (SAD) that is low in fiber, rich in sugar,
low in nutrients, and high in additives and chemicals, changing the ecosystem of
our guts
- Overuse of medications, such as anti-inflammatories,
antibiotics, acid-blocking drugs (see “The Dangers of Acid-Blocking Drugs,” below) and steroids, that disrupt the gut’s ability to stay in balance and do its
job
- Chronic low-grade infections or gut imbalances with bacterial or
yeast overgrowth, parasites, or even more serious gut
infections
- Exposure to toxins, such as mercury and mold, that damage
normal gut function
- Lack of adequate digestive enzyme function, which
can be caused by acid-blocking medications or zinc deficiency
- Chronic
stress, which can alter the gut’s nervous system, causing a leaky gut and
changing the
normal bacteria in the gut
By now you probably have a better
sense of why those “functional” bowel disorders I mentioned earlier are so
widespread — and why most conventional treatments fail to address the underlying
problems. All in all, we live in dangerous digestive times.
Fighting Food Allergies
As I noted before, it’s a rare digestive
problem that remains confined to the gut. One consequence of poor diet, stress,
medications, infections or toxins damaging the balance of normal gut function is
that our ability to tolerate food we normally eat is impaired — in other words,
we become sensitive or allergic to certain foods. All these factors can
damage the delicate lining of the small intestine, which, in turn, will harm
healthy bowel bacteria, creating injury and inflammation in that one-cell layer
of gut lining. When that happens, we develop a leaky gut. Because many of our
digestive enzymes (the chemicals that break down our food) are located right on
that delicate epithelial layer that is now damaged, we cannot digest our food
properly. Suddenly, we have partially digested food particles from normally
innocuous foods “leaking” into our circulation. And, because about 60
percent of our immune system is located in the gut, beneath that one-cell layer,
our bodies react by increasing our immune response and generating
inflammation. Our immune system, normally used to seeing fully digested foods
(like proteins broken down into amino acids, fats broken down into fatty acids
and carbohydrates broken down into simple sugars), suddenly “sees” foreign
(meaning partially digested) molecules. So it does what it is designed to
do: attack and defend! That is how we create antibodies and develop IgG
allergies to common foods. This is what makes us sick and fat, toxic and
inflamed, depressed and anxious.
How to Heal Your Gut
So, how do you bring your gut back into balance?
Here’s the plan I use with patients whose digestive distress has caused other
health problems. See how it works for you. - Eat whole,
unprocessed foods that contain plenty of fiber, like vegetables, beans,
nuts, seeds and whole grains.
- If you think you might have food
sensitivities, try an elimination diet. Cut out gluten, dairy, yeast,
corn, soy and eggs for a week or two and see how your gut feels and what
happens to your other symptoms.
- Immediately treat any infections or
overgrowth of bugs, like parasites, small bowel bacteria or
yeasts.
- Take digestive enzymes with your food.
- Take
probiotic supplements, which contain healthy bacteria for your
ecosystem.
- Take supplements of omega-3 fats, which help cool gut
inflammation.
- Use gut-healing nutrients such as glutamine and
zinc.
If you think you have “just” a digestive problem, think again. Having a
healthy gut doesn’t simply get you relief from bloating, gas, heartburn or
constipation: A healthy gut is central to your overall health, and it is
connected to everything that happens in your body. Keeping your digestive system
healthy is critical, because, ultimately, you are not only what you eat — you
are what you absorb.
Mark Hyman, MD, is the medical director and founder of
The UltraWellness Center in Lenox, Mass., and the former medical director at
Canyon Ranch health resort. He has authored several best-selling books,
including UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss (Scribner,
2006), UltraPrevention: The 6-Week Plan That Will Make You Healthy for Life
(Scribner, 2003), and The UltraSimple Diet (Pocket Books, 2007). Dr. Hyman also
is editor in chief of the peer-reviewed journal Alternative Therapies and a
leading expert in functional medicine. For more information, see www.ultrawellness.com/blog.
Your Gut - A Day at the Office
Wondering what the heck your gut does all day long? For starters, it
... - Breaks Down Your Food: Mechanically and chemically separates and
digests food with the help of adequate stomach acid, digestive enzymes and
bile.
- Ushers in the Good Stuff: Absorbs (through a delicate
one-cell-thick layer) just the right molecules — amino acids, fats, sugars,
vitamins and minerals — to keep us properly nourished.
- Bounces the
Bad Stuff: While letting in the nutrients essential for life, it must prevent,
block or neutralize nasty toxins, bugs and chemicals that flow through our
“inner tube of life.”
- Makes Raw Materials: Your gut bacteria produce
vitamins and other health-giving molecules that nourish you and make up your gut
ecosystem.
- Protects You: Balances your gut immune system (called the
GALT, or gut-associated lymphoid tissue), which comprises 60 percent of your
immune system, thereby protecting you from illness and supporting your vitality.
The Dangers of Acid-Blocking Drugs
Are millions of us born with a genetic defect that makes us produce too much
stomach acid? Do we need powerful, acid-blocking drugs to prevent heartburn and
reflux? Or, could something simply be out of balance? Consider this:
At least 10 percent of Americans have episodes of heartburn every day, and 44
percent have symptoms at least once a month. Overall, reflux or gastroesophageal
reflux disease (GERD, also known as heartburn) affects 25 to 35 percent of
the U.S. population. Fast on the heels of Lipitor and Plavix (drugs for
cholesterol and heart disease), acid-blocking drugs are the fourth top-selling
pharmaceutical in America’s $286 billion drug market. In fact, three of the
drugs to treat reflux — Nexium, Protonix and Prevacid — are in the top 20
best-selling drugs, accounting for some $13 billion in sales annually. When
I was a medical student and these drugs first came on the market, the
pharmaceutical representatives warned us how powerful they were. They told us
not to prescribe them for any longer than six weeks and only for patients with
documented ulcers. Now, these drugs are given like candy to anyone who has
had too many hot dogs at a ballgame. And one drug, Prilosec, whose patent
expired, is now available without a prescription. I’ve even seen a commercial
showing a family rushing to stop their father from eating a big sausage with
fried onions and peppers — and he tells them not to worry because he took his
acid-blocking pill! So, why are these drugs so bad? Well, their supposedly
“good” effect — shutting down stomach acid — is actually a bad effect. Stomach
acid is necessary to digest food, to activate digestive enzymes in your small
intestine, to prevent bacterial overgrowth in your small intestine, and to
help you absorb important minerals like calcium and magnesium and vitamins like
B12. Research indicates that taking these drugs can prevent you from properly
digesting your food, cause mineral and vitamin deficiencies, and lead to
irritable bowel, depression, hip fractures, and more. For example, studies
show that people who take long-term acid-blocking medications can become
deficient in vitamin B12, which can lead to depression, anemia, fatigue, nerve
damage and even dementia, especially in the elderly. Studies also show that
taking these drugs can cause dangerous overgrowth of bad bacteria in the
intestine, which can lead to life-threatening infections. For many more
people, low-grade overgrowth of bacteria in the small intestine leads to
bloating, gas, abdominal pain and diarrhea — which, by the way, are many of the
common “side effects” noted in the label warnings for these drugs. The funny
thing is, back in my medical school days, GERD was not even on the radar as a
significant illness. Some people had heartburn, and then there were people
with ulcers. For the most part, that was it. The upshot? It’s my view
that drug companies invent diseases to create markets for their products. It is
absurd to think that humans can’t feel good and live with normally functioning
digestive tracts without help from powerful drugs with dangerous side
effects. These drugs may occasionally be necessary for short-term use, but if
we deal with the root causes of digestive imbalances (as the practice of
functional medicine suggests), reflux and other acid-related conditions usually
can be managed without medication.
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness
Simply put, when your core systems are out of
balance, they make fertile ground
for the roots of illness. When they
are in balance, they become the keys to
creating wellness and
vitality:
-
Environmental Inputs (diet, lifestyle, toxins, stress and
trauma)
- Inflammation and Immune Balance (the hidden fire within)
- Hormone and Neurotransmitter Balance (insulin, thyroid,
adrenal balance; sex
hormones and mood chemicals)
- Gut and Digestive Health (digestion,
absorption,
assimilation, intestinal ecosystem and the gut-immune
system)
- Detoxification Imbalances and Function (getting rid of
wastes and
dealing with toxins)
- Creating Energy (the source of life energy and metabolism —
antioxidant
balance)
- Mind-Body/Body-Mind Connection (change your mind, change
your
body; change your body, change your mind)
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Functional Wellness, Part 3: Digestive Health
A well-functioning digestive system is the cornerstone of good health.
Find out how the gut works, what makes it vulnerable - and what you can
do to keep your own digestive tract in tiptop shape.
By Mark Hyman, MD | Features, September 2008 |
How Your Gut Works
Enemies of a Healthy Gut
Fighting Food Allergies
How to Heal Your Gut
Your Gut - A Day at the Office
The Dangers of Acid-Blocking Drugs
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness
Editors’ note: For more than 15 years, celebrated author and pioneering medical
visionary Mark Hyman, MD, has been practicing and promoting a revolutionary
healthcare concept known as functional medicine. It’s a patient-centered (vs.
disease-centered) approach that focuses on identifying and addressing the root
causes of chronic health challenges as opposed to merely treating symptoms.
Functional medicine also emphasizes incorporating nutrition and lifestyle
solutions rather than relying exclusively on pharmaceutical and surgical
interventions. Experience Life is proud to bring you this six-part series in
which Dr. Hyman describes the emerging practice of functional medicine and
explains how it can improve your well-being. Digestive distress is hardly a topic for dinner-party conversation,
but the truth is, it’s surprisingly common. About one in three Americans suffers
from gut problems of various sorts. Two of the top seven best-selling drugs in
the United States are prescribed for gastrointestinal problems. And nearly half
of all visits to internists are for “functional bowel disorders,” such as reflux
and irritable bowel syndrome. Doctors use the word “functional” to describe
problems related to function — situations where the bowel simply isn’t working
properly — as opposed to “structural” disorders, which are something we can see
(e.g., blockages, punctures, malformations), and which therefore are often
considered more “real.” But functional gut disorders are equally real problems
with very real causes — and sometimes dire consequences. Considering how
many people suffer from these problems, you would think our sophisticated
medical system would have a clear understanding of the causes of irritable
bowel syndrome, constipation, diarrhea, reflux, inflammatory bowel disease and
other common digestive issues. You would think by now we’d have developed great
treatments to fix these problems. Unfortunately, our understanding of this
highly sophisticated and integral part of our body is still quite primitive,
despite the explosion of scientific research on what Science magazine has called
“the inner tube of life.” As it turns out, digestive problems aren’t just
digestive problems. They can cause many other seemingly unrelated diseases, a
fact that has escaped most people — including many doctors. Over the last 15
years of practice and research, I have found the gut to be the source of
inestimable suffering throughout the body. Yet, when you treat the digestive
problem, the other symptoms often improve. These treatments promise relief from
common “functional” gastrointestinal symptoms (and most allergic and autoimmune
diseases, which originate in the gut), but they’ve also proven effective against
illnesses ranging from depression and attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) to dementia and Parkinson’s disease. Sound crazy? Let me
tell you about one of my patients. She was 57 and had suffered for eight years
from severe, unrelenting eczema all over her body. She saw doctor after doctor
for this red, oozing, scaly, itchy rash. They gave her salves, lotions, steroids
and antibiotics. But they never addressed the underlying cause of her
problem. When she came to me, I learned she ate a high-sugar diet and
suffered from frequent yeast infections. She also had a leaky gut, which is
known in medical terms as “increased intestinal permeability” — in other words,
the gut-wall barrier was not working. Plus, she had developed 24 immunoglobulin
G (IgG) food allergies, and her stool lacked healthy bacteria and showed an
overgrowth of yeast. She also had very high blood antibodies against
yeast. The answer? I treated her skin by treating her gut. I asked her to
stop eating the foods to which she had reactions, told her to stop feeding the
yeast by cutting out sugar and refined carbohydrates, and helped her kill the
yeast in her gut with antifungal medications and herbs. Then I replenished the
healthy bacteria and healing gut nutrients. The result? Her eczema disappeared —
and it has never come back.
How Your Gut Works (Back to Top)
Many people think of their digestive systems as a
series of tubes through which food is mechanically crushed and extruded. It’s
not as simple as that. Your gut’s health determines which nutrients are absorbed
and which toxins, allergens and microbes are repelled. As a result, it is
directly linked to the health of your entire body. Intestinal health could be
defined as the optimal digestion, absorption and assimilation of food. But that
is a big job that depends on many other factors. First, the bugs in your gut
function like a rainforest — a diverse and interdependent ecosystem. The 3
pounds of bacteria there include some 500 different species that act as a
chemical factory — helping you digest your food, produce vitamins, regulate
hormones, excrete toxins and produce healing compounds that keep your gut
healthy. But for you to be healthy, these bacteria must be in balance. Too
many of the wrong bugs, like parasites, yeasts and bad bacteria — or not enough
of the good bugs, like lactobacillus or bifidobacteria — can seriously damage
your health. (For more on good bugs and bad, see “Good Bacteria Welcome” in the
July/August 2007 archives.) Second, the gut is
delicate. Your entire immune system and the rest of your body are protected from
the toxic environment in the gut by only a one-cell-thick layer — the epithelium
— that covers a surface area the size of a tennis court! If that barrier is
damaged, you will get sick and your immune system will become overactive,
producing inflammation throughout the body. And then there’s your second
brain. That’s right, your second brain. Your gut literally contains its own
nervous system. In fact, the ”brain” in your gut contains more
neurotransmitters than the brain in your head. The intestinal nervous
system is wired back to your brain, and messages travel between the two. When
those messages are altered for any reason in any direction — from the brain to
the gut or the gut to the brain — your health will suffer. But wait, there’s
more: Your gut also has to dispose of all the toxins created as a byproduct of
your metabolism. If things get backed up, your entire body can become overrun
with toxins. Finally, in the midst of all of this, your gut must break down
all the food you eat, separate all the vitamins and minerals, and shuttle
everything across the epithelium into your bloodstream for you to stay healthy.
Enemies of a Healthy Gut (Back to Top)
With such a delicate balance and so many ways
for things to go wrong, it’s no wonder that so many of us are sick. Even in a
perfect world, our gut has a hard time keeping things balanced. In the
challenging circumstances of real life, there’s seemingly no end to
the things that knock our digestive systems off balance. They include:
- A standard American diet (SAD) that is low in fiber, rich in sugar,
low in nutrients, and high in additives and chemicals, changing the ecosystem of
our guts
- Overuse of medications, such as anti-inflammatories,
antibiotics, acid-blocking drugs (see “The Dangers of Acid-Blocking Drugs,” below) and steroids, that disrupt the gut’s ability to stay in balance and do its
job
- Chronic low-grade infections or gut imbalances with bacterial or
yeast overgrowth, parasites, or even more serious gut
infections
- Exposure to toxins, such as mercury and mold, that damage
normal gut function
- Lack of adequate digestive enzyme function, which
can be caused by acid-blocking medications or zinc deficiency
- Chronic
stress, which can alter the gut’s nervous system, causing a leaky gut and
changing the
normal bacteria in the gut
By now you probably have a better
sense of why those “functional” bowel disorders I mentioned earlier are so
widespread — and why most conventional treatments fail to address the underlying
problems. All in all, we live in dangerous digestive times.
Fighting Food Allergies (Back to Top)
As I noted before, it’s a rare digestive
problem that remains confined to the gut. One consequence of poor diet, stress,
medications, infections or toxins damaging the balance of normal gut function is
that our ability to tolerate food we normally eat is impaired — in other words,
we become sensitive or allergic to certain foods. All these factors can
damage the delicate lining of the small intestine, which, in turn, will harm
healthy bowel bacteria, creating injury and inflammation in that one-cell layer
of gut lining. When that happens, we develop a leaky gut. Because many of our
digestive enzymes (the chemicals that break down our food) are located right on
that delicate epithelial layer that is now damaged, we cannot digest our food
properly. Suddenly, we have partially digested food particles from normally
innocuous foods “leaking” into our circulation. And, because about 60
percent of our immune system is located in the gut, beneath that one-cell layer,
our bodies react by increasing our immune response and generating
inflammation. Our immune system, normally used to seeing fully digested foods
(like proteins broken down into amino acids, fats broken down into fatty acids
and carbohydrates broken down into simple sugars), suddenly “sees” foreign
(meaning partially digested) molecules. So it does what it is designed to
do: attack and defend! That is how we create antibodies and develop IgG
allergies to common foods. This is what makes us sick and fat, toxic and
inflamed, depressed and anxious.
How to Heal Your Gut (Back to Top)
So, how do you bring your gut back into balance?
Here’s the plan I use with patients whose digestive distress has caused other
health problems. See how it works for you. - Eat whole,
unprocessed foods that contain plenty of fiber, like vegetables, beans,
nuts, seeds and whole grains.
- If you think you might have food
sensitivities, try an elimination diet. Cut out gluten, dairy, yeast,
corn, soy and eggs for a week or two and see how your gut feels and what
happens to your other symptoms.
- Immediately treat any infections or
overgrowth of bugs, like parasites, small bowel bacteria or
yeasts.
- Take digestive enzymes with your food.
- Take
probiotic supplements, which contain healthy bacteria for your
ecosystem.
- Take supplements of omega-3 fats, which help cool gut
inflammation.
- Use gut-healing nutrients such as glutamine and
zinc.
If you think you have “just” a digestive problem, think again. Having a
healthy gut doesn’t simply get you relief from bloating, gas, heartburn or
constipation: A healthy gut is central to your overall health, and it is
connected to everything that happens in your body. Keeping your digestive system
healthy is critical, because, ultimately, you are not only what you eat — you
are what you absorb.
Mark Hyman, MD, is the medical director and founder of
The UltraWellness Center in Lenox, Mass., and the former medical director at
Canyon Ranch health resort. He has authored several best-selling books,
including UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss (Scribner,
2006), UltraPrevention: The 6-Week Plan That Will Make You Healthy for Life
(Scribner, 2003), and The UltraSimple Diet (Pocket Books, 2007). Dr. Hyman also
is editor in chief of the peer-reviewed journal Alternative Therapies and a
leading expert in functional medicine. For more information, see www.ultrawellness.com/blog.
Your Gut - A Day at the Office (Back to Top)
Wondering what the heck your gut does all day long? For starters, it
... - Breaks Down Your Food: Mechanically and chemically separates and
digests food with the help of adequate stomach acid, digestive enzymes and
bile.
- Ushers in the Good Stuff: Absorbs (through a delicate
one-cell-thick layer) just the right molecules — amino acids, fats, sugars,
vitamins and minerals — to keep us properly nourished.
- Bounces the
Bad Stuff: While letting in the nutrients essential for life, it must prevent,
block or neutralize nasty toxins, bugs and chemicals that flow through our
“inner tube of life.”
- Makes Raw Materials: Your gut bacteria produce
vitamins and other health-giving molecules that nourish you and make up your gut
ecosystem.
- Protects You: Balances your gut immune system (called the
GALT, or gut-associated lymphoid tissue), which comprises 60 percent of your
immune system, thereby protecting you from illness and supporting your vitality.
The Dangers of Acid-Blocking Drugs (Back to Top)
Are millions of us born with a genetic defect that makes us produce too much
stomach acid? Do we need powerful, acid-blocking drugs to prevent heartburn and
reflux? Or, could something simply be out of balance? Consider this:
At least 10 percent of Americans have episodes of heartburn every day, and 44
percent have symptoms at least once a month. Overall, reflux or gastroesophageal
reflux disease (GERD, also known as heartburn) affects 25 to 35 percent of
the U.S. population. Fast on the heels of Lipitor and Plavix (drugs for
cholesterol and heart disease), acid-blocking drugs are the fourth top-selling
pharmaceutical in America’s $286 billion drug market. In fact, three of the
drugs to treat reflux — Nexium, Protonix and Prevacid — are in the top 20
best-selling drugs, accounting for some $13 billion in sales annually. When
I was a medical student and these drugs first came on the market, the
pharmaceutical representatives warned us how powerful they were. They told us
not to prescribe them for any longer than six weeks and only for patients with
documented ulcers. Now, these drugs are given like candy to anyone who has
had too many hot dogs at a ballgame. And one drug, Prilosec, whose patent
expired, is now available without a prescription. I’ve even seen a commercial
showing a family rushing to stop their father from eating a big sausage with
fried onions and peppers — and he tells them not to worry because he took his
acid-blocking pill! So, why are these drugs so bad? Well, their supposedly
“good” effect — shutting down stomach acid — is actually a bad effect. Stomach
acid is necessary to digest food, to activate digestive enzymes in your small
intestine, to prevent bacterial overgrowth in your small intestine, and to
help you absorb important minerals like calcium and magnesium and vitamins like
B12. Research indicates that taking these drugs can prevent you from properly
digesting your food, cause mineral and vitamin deficiencies, and lead to
irritable bowel, depression, hip fractures, and more. For example, studies
show that people who take long-term acid-blocking medications can become
deficient in vitamin B12, which can lead to depression, anemia, fatigue, nerve
damage and even dementia, especially in the elderly. Studies also show that
taking these drugs can cause dangerous overgrowth of bad bacteria in the
intestine, which can lead to life-threatening infections. For many more
people, low-grade overgrowth of bacteria in the small intestine leads to
bloating, gas, abdominal pain and diarrhea — which, by the way, are many of the
common “side effects” noted in the label warnings for these drugs. The funny
thing is, back in my medical school days, GERD was not even on the radar as a
significant illness. Some people had heartburn, and then there were people
with ulcers. For the most part, that was it. The upshot? It’s my view
that drug companies invent diseases to create markets for their products. It is
absurd to think that humans can’t feel good and live with normally functioning
digestive tracts without help from powerful drugs with dangerous side
effects. These drugs may occasionally be necessary for short-term use, but if
we deal with the root causes of digestive imbalances (as the practice of
functional medicine suggests), reflux and other acid-related conditions usually
can be managed without medication.
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness (Back to Top)
Simply put, when your core systems are out of
balance, they make fertile ground
for the roots of illness. When they
are in balance, they become the keys to
creating wellness and
vitality:
-
Environmental Inputs (diet, lifestyle, toxins, stress and
trauma)
- Inflammation and Immune Balance (the hidden fire within)
- Hormone and Neurotransmitter Balance (insulin, thyroid,
adrenal balance; sex
hormones and mood chemicals)
- Gut and Digestive Health (digestion,
absorption,
assimilation, intestinal ecosystem and the gut-immune
system)
- Detoxification Imbalances and Function (getting rid of
wastes and
dealing with toxins)
- Creating Energy (the source of life energy and metabolism —
antioxidant
balance)
- Mind-Body/Body-Mind Connection (change your mind, change
your
body; change your body, change your mind)
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September 24, 2009
Jamie, EL Editor says:
Hi, Sandy: This blog post by Dr. Mark Hyman offers some alternative suggestions for dealing with heartburn that you may find helpful. You can find more helpful blog entries from Dr. Hyman at www.ultrawellness.com/blog. Good luck!
November 27, 2008
SANDY says:
I have daily heartburn and have been struggling with this for several years. I am an extremely healthy eater...have been "into"health & nutrition for 25 years. I also exercise daily. I don't take drugs, but I'm concerned that the heartburn will cause me to have problems. I also use a daily pro-biotic and aloe gel. I just don't know how to stop the heartburn. Any suggestions??? (Thank you)