Download Controlling Hypertension Without Synthetic Medications

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Genetic code wikipedia , lookup

Pharmaceutical industry wikipedia , lookup

Biochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Amino acid synthesis wikipedia , lookup

Biosynthesis wikipedia , lookup

Epoxyeicosatrienoic acid wikipedia , lookup

Nitric oxide wikipedia , lookup

Gaseous signaling molecules wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Controlling Hypertension Without Synthetic Medications
By Desmond Allen, PhD, ND, RCP
A Licensed Respiratory Care Practitioner with a PhD in health administration, a degree in
Naturopathy and the author of several articles and books
Dr. Allen does not advise the reader to arbitrarily abandon prescribed allopathic therapies. But
he does encourage everyone to take responsibility for his/her own healthcare decisions, and to
seek the advice of an alternative healthcare professional before implementing alternative
remedies.
The medical community is keeping a secret that you need to know. The beneficial affects
of the amino acid, L-Arginine, are amazing. Addressed in nearly 30,000 scientific research papers,
it may be the most documented, yet most secret topic in science. Even though the 1998 Noble
Prize for medicine was awarded for work in this area, physicians refuse to inform the public of the
dramatic clinical outcomes achieved by daily dietary supplements of this simple amino acid.
We consume about 5 to 6 grams of arginine daily, from certain proteins. Arginine-derived
nitric oxide, dubbed ADNO, is synthesized as needed by the enzyme, endothelial nitric oxide
synthase, (NOS). After years of unanswered questions, science now knows that the body uses
ADNO molecules to regulate vessel tone and affect vessel relaxation. For various reasons, the
endothelium may not release adequate amounts of NOS, thereby resulting in inadequate However,
ANDO. L-Arginine supplements have proven to increase ADNO. In turn, this has proven to
reverse hypertension, atherosclerosis, and impotence. Some have concluded, perhaps anecdotally,
that L-Arginine could replace every high blood pressure medication on the market.
Other important properties of ADNO have been discovered as well. It helps regulate lipid
and cholesterol levels. It boosts the immune system as a free-radical scavenger. It has certain
antibacterial, antiviral and antifungal effects. It is a powerful anticoagulant and it is believed to be
the substance that facilitates long-term memory. L-Arginine is a safe and common amino acid
with virtually no side effects. It benefits are undisputed.
So, why the secret? Two reasons. The pharmaceutical companies make no money on
L-Arginine. It cannot be patented. Until they can figure out a way to profit from it, it is unlikely
that medicine will begin prescribing it. Case in point. L-Arginine’s ability to reverse impotence
has long been known to medical scientist, but there was no commercial profit to be made. This
prompted research that eventually generated a certain, popular, patentable, anti-impotence
medication. Now the pharmaceutical company can promote a $10 pill rather than a simple amino
acid that cost mere pennies.
The ego factor is likely an issue as well. L-Arginine has no mystic, it is not regulated.
Prescribing this substance would be like prescribing filet mignon. Certainly physicians must
provide their patients a more potent, controlled substance, something synthetic, something worthy
of their superior education.
From a financial perspective, this single substance potentially threatens the entire medical
industry. It has proven an affective and very inexpensive treatment for a variety of medical
conditions. Hypertension alone is a multi-billion dollar business for health care. It’s a gold mine
for the pharmaceutical companies, the hospitals, and the physicians. The damage it does generates
an untold number of office visits and hospitalizations every year for kidney and eye damage, stroke
and cardiovascular troubles. Consider the cardiovascular aspect alone: electrocardiograms,
echocardiograms, cardiac stress tests, cath labs procedures, and interpretation fees for each. Then
there is cardiovascular surgery and cardiac rehabilitation. Avoiding all this with a mere amino acid
supplement that cost about 50 cents a day would wreak havoc to the industry.
Cynical? Yes, but for good reason.
I receive many requests from traditional, allopathic, health care workers for information on
to control hypertension by natural methods. The volume of these requests ranks second only to the
control of asthma. This is interesting because some 50 million Americans are known to suffer high
blood pressure,1 which is five times that of asthma. I believe the answer to this disproportion is
multi-focal. An acute asthmatic attack is more dramatic than is an episode of high blood pressure,
and asthma claims many children as it victims. Furthermore, many assume there is no treatment
other than pharmacology for their hypertension and simply never investigate further. Still others
do not realize they suffer from hypertension, and likely, even more simply choose to ignore it.
Hoping it will go away, they convince themselves they are in no harm.
However, it did not earn the nick name “silent killer” in vain. Left untreated, hypertension
can lead to countless other medical problems from kidney and heart failure, to stroke. In time, its
toll is inevitable as evidence by some 33 thousand untimely deaths each year.2
Allopathic pharmacopeia has a selection of several effective treatments for hypertension,
ranging from diuretic, alpha-blockers, beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors and calcium channel blockers.
But each has significant side effects. Depending upon the medication, side effects may include
skin rashes, photosensitivity, headache, electrolyte imbalances, hypokalemia leading to increased
serum creatinine, increase uric acid leading to gout, kidney stones, increase glucose, increased
LDL-cholesterol, increased triglycerides, and most immediately disturbing for many, impotence.1
Although there are very effective natural remedies for treating hypertension, it should be of
little surprise that they are shunned by the allopathic community. The pharmaceutical companies
make many millions of dollars on these drugs. They have wined and dined countless physicians on
their profits. Although the natural remedies can hardly be classified as highly guarded secrets,
certainly they are classified as “hush, hush” within the industry.
Perhaps the most significant discovery in recent years is the many positive effects of nitric
oxide. For more than a decade, researchers have been publishing articles about the powerful
vasodilating effects of nitric oxide, which they discovered is converted at the cellular level from
the amino acid Arginine.3-6 Although body builders have used L-Arginine for years to stimulate the
release of the human growth hormone HGH, only a few research scientists suspected that it played
a key role in vessel relaxation.
We now know there are at least three kinds of a special enzymes called nitric oxide
synthase that causes different parts of the body to convert L-Arginine into nitric oxide as needed.
It has be dubbed arginine-derived nitric oxide or ADNO. There is one in the brain that may be
responsible for encoding long-term memory; one is released for the immune cells to produce
ADNO for use as an anti-oxidant; and the third is released by the endothelium to creating ADNO
for vessel relaxation.7 Although the molecule lasts only a few seconds it has a potent vasodilating
effect upon the vessel walls. It is now realized that nitric oxide is essential to vasodilatation and
the maintenance of systemic vascular pressure. It is this gas that regulates the flow and shunting
of blood throughout the body as needed.8
Recently, the 1998 Nobel Prize for Medicine was awarded to three American researchers
for their work in this area. Yet it is most curious that despite more than 10-thousand citations in
significant scientific research journals concerning arginine-derived nitric oxide,9 still the medical
community and pharmacopeia neglect to make use of it. Why? As for the pharmaceutical industry,
they cannot patent it, therefore they can make no money selling it. As for the physicians, they are
minions of the pharmaceutical companies, brainwashed into thriving on whatever they are spoon
feed from above.
Arginine is found in various meats and dairy produces. The average diet has about 5-6
grams per day. As a supplement for hypertension, researcher recommend from 3 to 6 grams
daily,10 taken TID, thereby keeping a consent supply in the system. In addition to vessel relaxation,
research has shown ADNO to have other benefits. It is a potent free-radical scavenger, it lowers
LDL-cholesterol, is an anticoagulant, it encodes long-term memory, it dramatically improves
impotence, it relaxes hypertonic sphincters muscles such as prevent the healing of hemorrhoids;
and these is evidence that it could play a vital role in pancreatic insulin regulation and may prevent
incidence of preeclampsia.11 However, there is a caution for anyone suffering from certain
conditions that may not tolerate excessive vascular dilatation: for example, migraines, depression,
certain autoimmune disorders, etc.
There are other, important natural remedies for hypertension as well. Not the lest of which
are losing weight (if applicable), avoiding tobacco, caffeine, alcohol, table salt and foods with a
high inorganic sodium chloride content. Some herbs that elevate the blood pressure and should be
avoided as well are licorice, ma hung (ephedra).2
For many years we have known that 2 or 3 gloves of garlic a day will effectively lower high
blood pressure. It affects the autonomic nervous system and has hypolipidaemic properties that
can lower the systolic pressure by 20-30 mm Hg and the diastolic by 10-20 mm HG. Onions have
similar effects on the lipids levels and the blood pressure.12
Foods rich in potassium, magnesium and calcium are essential. Because mineral
deficiencies have been linked to hypertension supplements may be necessary. Other herbs have
proven beneficial for hypertension: cayenne, chamomile, fennel, hawthorn berries, parsley, and
rosemary. Flaxseed, olive and primrose oil contain essential Omega-3 fatty acids that improve
circulation, lower cholesterol and help lower blood pressure.2
Lifestyle cannot be under estimated when dealing with hypertension. Most cases can be
corrected with diet and exercise. Indeed, the disorder is primarily associated with the Western diet,
found almost exclusively in developed countries.12 Stress is another factor that cannot be
overlooked. Some researchers have suggested that stress is related to 80% of major illnesses.13
Another issue that must be considered when dealing with hypertension is heavy metal
toxicity.13 Chronic exposure to metals such as lead in contaminated drinking water, or cadmium in
cigarette smoke can be contributing and even primary causes of hypertension as they clog the
arteries and inhibit vessel elasticity. Along with avoiding the exposure, supplemental chelating
agents can be taken to rid these toxins from the body. They will simultaneously remove calcium
deposits and blood fats as well.14
Oral chelation is safe.15 As you can see, some of the more potent and popular agents are
merely alfalfa; the amino acids cysteine and glutathione, the minerals manganese, selenium,
potassium and zinc; and the antioxidant vitamins C and E.
1
3
3
DX & TX pp 373-90.
Balch, pp320-24.
M
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
M
M
M
Fried, p 49.
_____ p 67-74.
_____ p 11.
_____ p 7.
_____ p 5-6.
Murray, pp 378-5.
Balch, p 496.
Kennedy Ron. Balancing Blood Pressure with a Time-Tested Technique. Journal of
Longevity. vol 6 No 3 2000 29-31.
Walker pp 111-136.