Saturday, April 2, 2016

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Toxemia

I've just finished reading Toxemia Explained by Dr. J. H. Tilden. It was first published in 1926, and I'd have to admit, if I hadn't read a few dozen related books before reading it, I may have quickly brushed him off as a nut case. But after having read Burkitt (see last post) and Food is Your Best Medicine by Dr. Bieler (see Book Links) I'd have to say that he is the closest thing I've seen to a genius when it comes to enabling individuals with a simple means of maintaining excellent health throughout life.

My paraphrased version of his theory of Toxemia is: via your body's normal metabolism, you break things down and build them up, which results in metabolic wastes, which are toxins if not eliminated from your body promptly. Your body has primary means of eliminating various toxins via your various organs, plus it has a back up plan of vicarious elimination where a secondary or tertiary organ helps out if the main organ is overloaded. If this happens for a while you have what he terms a "crisis of elimination" and you get sick. Do this repeatedly and you eventually end up with a chronic disease because you're starting to impair the function of one or more organs. Do it even longer and you end up with cancer. Pretty plain and simple - cut and dried. In my mind, it seems to work for just about any disease you can think of. You can read the book if you want specific examples, of which he provides plenty.

So, basically the Burkitt book (see Book Links) is a fairly thorough (though not exhaustive) list of the sorts of chronic diseases you are likely to acquire due to Toxemia if you go through life constipated.

This book has absolutely convinced me that conventional medicine (as a whole, though there are individual exceptions) has no interest in helping people achieve health. They simply want to keep a bunch of sick people from dying. After all, that's where the money is...

So, like Dr. Mercola (see Health Links) says, "Take Control of Your Health." If you don't learn what it takes to keep yourself healthy you'll suffer - physically, emotionally, financially and any other way you can think of.

One comment that Tilden makes in his book is that athletes usually suffer from Toxemia due to the extraordinary loads that are placed on their bodies. As a result they often die young (his words, not mine). I was a bit taken back by the comment, but I suspect he may have been talking about professional athletes. How many football players, boxers, even professional cyclists have you heard of that died young or became disabled ? How many that lived to a ripe old age, free of disabilities? When I go through my mental list they mostly fall in the former category. But when I think of amateur athletes, the tend more to fall in the latter. Still, I think Toxemia could explain overtraining syndrome...

Read the book (you can download a PDF copy for free using the link at the beginning of this post or in the Book Links). And have a dictionary handy. While not necessarily a technical tome, he does use some words that are rather obscure nowadays.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Excess Calories = Weight Gain? Not!!

I'm in the middle of reading Refined Carbohydrate Foods and Disease: Some Implications of Dietary Fiber by Burkitt and Trowell (1975). It clearly reinforces the notion that weight gain is not simply a result of excess calorie consumption, but just as much the result of poor bowel motility. Basically the argument is that increased consumption of refined carbohydrates during the last 150 years has resulted in a stunning loss of fiber from our diets. The authors compared an estimate of daily wheat fiber consumption in 1770 to that of 1970, showing that consumption of such fiber went from 6.26 grams per day down to .2 grams per day! Of course wheat constitutes a small portion of total dietary fiber (don't forget your veggies), but that is a very stunning difference. They also showed how the reduction of wheat dietary fiber and increased sugar consumption mirrored the increase in obesity.

I'm currently about half way through the book, but what I just read struck a chord with me, as it confirms my own experience with weight gain and loss during the past few decades. They point out that studies long ago established that most nutrients and calories are absorbed in the small intestine, and that the efficiency of the small intestine decreases as fiber increases. In effect, more fiber means a faster transit time and more calories being excreted as waste. This absolutely banishes the notion that weight gain is a result of excess calories - weight gain is as much a result of chronic constipation! Of course, exercise also increases bowel motility, which is why I was able to eat 5,000 to 7,000 calories of pure junk food every day (think of a six-pack of donuts for breakfast every morning) and maintain a healthy body weight in the mid-1980s while riding hundreds of miles per week (yes, that is a lot of miles, but probably not enough to soak up 7,000 calories per day - I certainly wasn't racing back then).

It is easy to see if you are getting a good balance of fiber in your diet by checking your (hopefully) daily output against the Bristol Stool Analysis Chart. It should consistently be 3s and 4s. It's interesting that the German's knew about the importance of stool analysis long before the Bristol chart came out, which is why the Platform Toilet is fairly ubiquitous in that country. It provides a shelf that permits close up examination of the day's efforts, which is invaluable if you have a large number of "sinkers" vs. "floaters" (the latter is caused by increased fat content, by the way). NOTE: There is one other major stool category - the "mixers," effectively the Type 7 stool shown on the Bristol chart.

The interesting thing is, if you are getting sufficient fiber from foods as opposed to supplements, you increase your satiety and it is much easier to resist overeating the calorie dense carbohydrate foods that cause weight gain for most people. And when you do eat these sorts of calories your body is less likely to absorb as much of them, a very win-win situation!

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Fat Loss

I just finished reading two books by Al Sears, MD: Dr. Sears' High Speed Fat Loss in 7 Easy Steps and P.A.C.E.: The 12-Minute Fitness Revolution. The former does a good job of summarizing most of what I've gleaned from dozens of books on fitness and nutrition over the past several years:
  • Avoid processed foods like the plague.
  • Increase protein intake to burn fat.
  • Eat healthy fats - particularly those with lots of Omega 3 fatty acids (and coconut oil).

It also makes an interesting, and to me compelling, case against moderate intensity "cardio" exercise, the sort of exercise that is pretty much universally claimed to burn the most fat. His argument is that too much of this sort of training only trains your body to store fat, particularly if you eat lots of refined carbs, which your body can very efficiently store as fat. In my experience I believe this to be true. High intensity exercise revs up your metabolism for long after you've finished exercising, and it is the sort of exercise that challenges your lungs and heart to grow stronger (which is key to getting faster, opposed to hitting a plateau). For the past few years I've done most of my training using "chunks": chunks of intensity interspersed with my normal riding, aiming for about 20 minutes or so of intensity (i.e. anaerobic zone performance) per training session. An added advantage is that I train less, so I recover faster (a very important consideration when your over 50, but also for folks that work a lot or have lots of family obligations). As I get closer to race day, the frequency and intensity of my training drops, while the duration increases so that the duration and intensity becomes more like race day as the actual race gets closer.

The latter book expands on the former. It's perhaps written more for the sedentary 50 year old than the elite athlete, but it was still a worthwhile read. The only criticism is that there is a fair amount of hawking of Dr. Sears' services and wares. But even with that he is pretty much dead on, with perhaps one criticism. At one point in the book he states that "overconsumption of protein is the key to fat loss." While I believe it can be crucial for rapid initial loss of fat, long term consumption of too much protein can be very hard on your kidneys. Moderate amounts of protein and a whole foods diet is probably a lot safer bet. And he seems to stick to that path through most, but not all, of the book (the book really needs a good editor).

Probably the two most worthwhile parts of the book are his two analogies that refute the conventional wisdom that weight control is merely a matter of controlling caloric intake. When my wife sees how much I eat and am still able to maintain an off season weight of around 168 pounds, she tends to agree with Dr. Sears. His first example is a woman that eats a carb heavy (most likely refined carbs) diet. As she restricts her calories her weight continues to go up, despite eating 1500 calories or less per day for weeks. His second example is a man that eats several thousands of calories per day, mostly of protein, and can't gain the additional weight that he wants (the same sort of diet that body builders use to achieve a very lean body mass). Clearly weight is not a matter of calories in, calories out. The former example illustrates how easily your body will metabolize refined carbohydrates (sugar, flour, all the refined corn and soy fillers, etc) into fat while breaking down your own muscle tissue to get an adequate amount of protein. The latter example clearly shows that excess calories are not always stored as fat. The main concern that I have for the latter example, especially for folks over 50, is that overconsumption of meat can raise your body's acidity, with lots of bad implications for your health, including leaching calcium from your bones. That's why moderate protein consumption (a portion about the size of your palm at each meal) together with lots of whole fruits and vegetables (to create a better acid/alkaline balance in your body) is a better strategy for everyday eating.