As a doctor who practices integrative medicine, I
focus on health care and not just disease care.
I always attempt to understand the deeper
underlying causes of any illness or condition and
not simply treat superficial symptoms. So when
it comes to looking at causes of disease I am working from the
inside out rather than outside in.
This is such an important topic that I devoted an entire chapter
to the "Causes of Disease" in my latest book Staying Healthy with
NEW Medicine. In brief, I believe that cellular dysfunction is one of
the main causes of body imbalance, inflammation, and dis-ease.
The health of our cells is affected adversely by two primary factors—
deficiency, by which I mean not enough intake and assimilation
of the necessary (required) nutrients; and toxicity—contact with
too many harmful man-made chemicals and chemical-containing
products.
Nutrients
As for nutrients—we need an adequate supply of amino acids
(from protein foods), fatty acids, some carbohydrates, plus
vitamins, minerals, and phytonutrients (these are chemicals that
plants produce and use to stay healthy—providing protection,
for example, from insect attacks or radiation from UV rays).
Any deficiency of these essential nutrients can diminish cellular
function.
Toxins
As for toxins—the external environment has a significant impact
on our cell health—from the level of contaminants, chemicals and
artificial additives in the foods we eat, the water we drink, and the
air we breathe, and with a special concern for the products we use
in our homes and gardens, or put on our bodies.
In fact personal care products are one of the most common
yet overlooked sources of environmental toxicity.
The average adult uses nine personal care products a day,
exposing themselves to as many as 126 different chemical
ingredients. What makes things worse is that items like
toothpaste, shampoo, lotion, makeup, or deodorant, are not
held to the same standard as food or drugs, which we put in our bodies. Hair coloring is potentially one of the most toxic of
all, linked to increased rates of breast cancer in a recent 2017
Rutgers University study.1 This is especially troubling given that
an estimated 75 percent of U.S. women over age 18 color their
hair. Obviously we need more research on the short and long-term
health consequences of using these kinds of products.
As consumers we need to be aware of the toxic potential of
what we buy.
In addition many cosmetics are now imported, with virtually
no regulation or inspection. The FDA recently stated that while
such shipments had doubled in the past decade, there were just
six inspectors assigned to the more than 3,000,000 shipments
which arrived last year from over 180 different countries and
29,000 foreign companies, few of which have registered with
the agency, as they are not required to do so.
- The FDA physically inspected just 0.3 percent of such imports last year.
- Laboratory tests were conducted on an even smaller sample—just 364.
- 20 percent of those tests led to adverse findings; including bacterial contamination, illegal color additives, ingredients that were not on the label as required, and unsafe chemical substances like mercury that can cause kidney and nervous system damage.
Given that it is doing so few inspections, the FDA really has
no way of knowing the scope of the problem with imported
cosmetics, and neither do we. Clearly this is area where we all
need to pay close attention to what we buy and what we use.
Pollutants in the Home and Office
Another area of similar concern is the widespread use of
potentially toxic chemical products in our homes and gardens.
Just to give you some idea of the scope of this problem, here's
a list of the major indoor pollutant sources to watch out for. It
is from my book Staying Healthy with Nutrition:
- Hydrocarbon fuel combustion—the burning of coal, gasoline, natural gas, wax candles
- Pesticide sprays—used on insects and rodents
- Cleaning fluids—cleansers, soap, bleach, detergents, ammonia, window cleaners
- Paints, adhesives glues, and solvents—used in housework and hobbies
- Plastics—used in many areas, but especially important to review drinking water, beverage and food storage containers
- Heating/Cooling systems—which can spread toxins, especially forced-air systems. This also includes your car.
- Smoke—(secondary or side-stream, smoke is now clearly a big problem), fireplace smoke or barbecue chemicals can also be hazardous
- Aerosol sprays—disinfectants, and cleaners—mostly propellants, which may be fluorocarbons or hydrocarbons, both of which are problematic
- Dust—which can carry sensitizing or toxic materials, including mites, molds, bacteria, pollens, carbon monoxide, asbestos, pesticides, solvents, sulfur dioxide, lead, smoke, and vinyl chloride
Obviously we need to know more about the short
and long-term health implications of using these
kinds of products both in our homes and on our
bodies, and we need to be watchful consumers,
especially when children are involved where any
negative effects can be even more serious and
long lasting. A great resource that I recommend
is the Environmental Working Group's (EWG)
www.ewg.org online database of potentially toxic
household and cosmetic products, which also
includes recommended non-toxic alternatives.
This is all part of living more naturally, using
fewer chemicals on and in our bodies and in our
surroundings overall; this is a conscientious
reduction in the use of synthetically made and
petro-chemically-based products, which have a
negative and toxic downstream effect in both
our local and global environments.
This shift to a more natural lifestyle is
growing across our nation and the globe, and
is based largely on the same principles as those
of NEW Medicine: taking personal responsibility
for our health and for the planet, and recognizing
the incredibly complex interactions between the
decisions we make, the products we use, and
their affect upon our entire environment and
ecosystem, including our own and our family's
health.
Essential Nutrients For Avoiding Cellular Deficiency
Macronutrients:
Proteins and amino acids, carbohydrates, fats and essential oils
Micronutrients:
Vitamins: A, C, D, E, K, B1, B6, B3, B12, CoQ10, Lipoic acid (Most must come from our diet, and a few the body makes, like coQ10 and lipoic acid.)
Minerals: all must come from our diet and
include calcium, magnesium, potassium,
sodium, zinc, copper, iron, manganese,
selenium, iodine, traces of boron and others.
In addition the soil must contain these minerals
for them to be in our food, and much soil is now
seriously depleted.
Phytonutrients: hundreds of plant substances,
such as flavonoids and carotenoids, which give
our fruits, vegetables, herbs and basically all
foods their color, aroma, and add to their flavor.
These have many physiological and protective
functions for our body.
Antioxidants:these nutrients protect us from
"free radicals," the unstable molecules that
can cause inflammation and damage; these
nutrients include Vitamins A (and betacarotene),
C, D, and E plus some B vitamins;
minerals zinc and selenium, with protective
activity also from iron and magnesium;
coenzyme Q10 and alpha lipoic acid; and
amino acid L-cysteine, which helps support
glutathione.
References:
- https://www.cinj.org/use-dark-hair-dye-and-relaxers-associated-increased-breast-cancer-risk