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the Nutritional T h e r a p i s t Spring 2008 The Nutritional Therapy Practitioner’s Guide to Supporting Dry Eye Syndrome What’s inside… Page 4 Materia Medica Part 6-Calendula Officinale by Tracy Bosnian, CH, NTP Page 6 Organic & Toxin-Free Solutions for Skin Disorders by Dana Luchini, ME, NTP Page 8 Reclaiming Our Most Ancient Hormone: How Hiding from the Sun Hurts Your Health by Diane Wisenberg, BS, NTP Page 10 Nutritionally Speaking: Nutrient-Rich Infusions by Yaakov Levine, NTP Page 15 Sea Vegetables-The Traditional Mineral Supplement by Bob Quinn, L.Ac, DAOM By Kat Carroll, NTP and reviewed by Donald A. Carroll, OD, NTP Dry eye syndrome (DES) is the most common complaint to eye doctors. If you’ve ever experienced dry eyes, especially while trying to wear contact lenses, it is very distracting, aggravating, and a real nuisance. The typical symptoms of DES include dryness, irritation, grittiness, burning, and difficulty reading for extended periods of time. Strangely enough, excessive tearing and watering are also indicative of DES. In extreme cases, light sensitivity, pain and diminished vision can result. DES is particularly common among peri and postmenopausal women; there is a gender bias and a hormonal aspect to this syndrome. How empowering would it be to have the proverbial “three easy steps to end dry eye” to offer your clients? How much more so if those steps avoided the use of any artificial tears, drugs like corticosteriods, or surgical procedures such as punctal plugs that prevent tear drainage from the punctum? don’t reach the core of the problem. Only restoration of proper structure and function to the tear film will provide a permanent resolution to DES. After repletion, diet and lifestyle have been assessed and addressed, only then should we consider using remedial means to alleviate dry eye such as topical lubricant eye drops, corticosteroid eye drops, oral anti-inflammatory drugs or surgical methods like insertion of punctual plugs. DES is best addressed first by nutritional therapy, supplementation and lifestyle education; particularly as there is a strong correlation between DES and systemic inflammatory processes such as diabetes and autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis. In our experience at Medical Vision Center and Nutritional Visions Natural Health Center in Morton, Washington, the patients who take a diligent, disciplined and educated Continued on page... 2 None of the above is permanent, and medical solutions 1 The NTP’s Guide to Supporting Dry Eye Syndrome.. Cont) Continued from page... 1 course of action to rectify their DES show remarkable success in eradicating the root of the dysfunction and thus effectively resolve their symptoms. We can’t treat the eye naturally without raising the general level of health in the rest of the body; patients like this added perk. We will discuss a few strategies the Nutritional Therapy Practitioner can employ as part of the total body care NTP’s provide that will restore structure and function to the eye. First let’s look at the different characteristics of DES, common causes and the ocular layers that make up the tear film. There are two types of dry eye: Aqueous (water) insufficiency which causes a decrease in tear production Tears that simply evaporate too fast. Dry eyes can result from: Aging Being in a peri-menopausal or post-menopausal status Deficiencies in fatty acids and vitamins and minerals Long-term contact lens wear As a side effect of many medications LASIK or cataract surgery Diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and systemic inflammatory diseases Environmental impacts affecting DES: Dry office environment Wind Irritation from smoke or smoking Staring at the computer without blinking Marcie Larsen, BA Operations Coordinator Yaakov Levine, NTP The Nutritional Therapist is mailed quarterly to all current members of the Nutritional Therapy Association, Inc. PO Box 354 The tears are made up of three different layers: mucin or mucus layer, aqueous or water layer, and lipid or fat layer. Olympia, WA 98507 Phone: 800-918-9798 Fax: 360-528-2564 Email: [email protected] Continued on page 12... Website: www.nutritionaltherapy.com Disclaimer Statements made in this newsletter have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products or protocols are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease or be used as a substitute for appropriate care of a qualified healthcare professional. The ideas and options of contributing authors do not necessarily reflect those of the Nutritional Therapy Association, Inc. 2 Bio-D-Mulsion™ and the Importance of Micro-emulsification Biotics Research Corporation’s, vitamin D is micro-emulsified to enhance absorption and utilization, which is particularly important for those with malabsorption conditions. Independent clinical experience suggests the micro-emulsion form of vitamin D provides significant improvements in serum levels of 25-OH-vitamin D following supplementation. Each drop of Bio-D-Mulsion™ supplies 400 IU of vitamin D3, while each drop of Bio-D-Mulsion Forte™ supplies 2,000 IU of vitamin D3. With an increased knowledge of the importance of maintaining adequate vitamin D levels, many clinicians recommend supplementation and annual screening for 25-OH-vitamin D levels, especially for patients at risk for deficiency as well as those who may benefit from supplementation. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Watch for our Upcoming Seminars Sponsored by Biotics Research NW May 13-15, 2008 July 25-27, 2008 Intensive CRA® Mentoring by Dr. Primary Care for Women Dick Versendaal & Mary Jane Mack, Portland, OR Ph.D. Issaquah, WA Foundations of Functional Nutrition Part I of II May 17, 2008 Biotics Product Review Seminar Portland, OR Vancouver, WA September 23-25, 2008 May 31-June 1, 2008 Intensive CRA® Mentoring by Dr. Nutritional Reflex Technique (N.R.T.) Dick Versendaal & Mary Jane Mack, Seattle, WA Ph.D. Issaquah, WA September 27-28, 2008 Contact Reflex Analysis® Seminar Seattle, WA October 11-12, 2008 Foundations of Functional Nutrition Part I of II Seattle, WA October 18-19, 2008 Dr. Abbas Qutab Portland, OR Call Biotics NW for more information at 800-636-6913 PO Box 7027 Olympia, WA 98507 www.bioticsnw.com 3 Materia Medica Part 6 By Tracy Bosnian, CH, NTP Habitat: Calendula likes a sunny position and tolerates all but waterlogged soils. It’s the time of the year when we start to see the first flowers of spring popping up their heads. They look so beautiful, as they raise their lovely faces to bask in the sunlight. My favorite flower, the one that lets me know the sunny weather is really coming, is Calendula. It is one of those plants that I could not live without. It graces my kitchen as well as my toolbox of medicinal herbs. The uses for this invaluable plant will not begin to fit into the space I have for this article, so I encourage you to do more research on your own. Not to mention planting a big patch of it in your yard. Botanical Name: Calendula officinale. Please do not confuse this plant with the common garden Marigold (tagetes patula) they are very different plants and have different uses. Common Names: Calendula, Pot Marigold, English Marigold, Poor Man’s Saffron, Holigold, Herb of the Sun. Family: Compositae/ Asteraceae/ Sunflower/ Daisy Botanical description: It is technically an annual, but in our climate of the PNW it often reseeds itself making you think it is a perennial. It has alternate leaves that are lace-shaped. The flowers are ray flowers and can range in color from yellow-gold to deep orange, with dark brown centers. Calendula can grow up to 28 inches tall. 4 Cultivation: Seeds can be sown indoors in February or outdoors in early spring. You can plant it in the autumn to over-winter and make pushy plants the following year. Harvest/Part used: Flowers, leaves and stems. Toxicity: None, but remember do not confuse with French Marigold (tagetes patula) Constituents: Primary constituents are calendulin and faradiol ester, along with volatile/essential oils, resins, flavonoids (triterpenes), mucilage, saponins, Vitamin A precursors (carotenes and carotinoid pigments), phosphorus, and steroidal compounds. Preparation: Calendula can be made into liquid extracts, dried for tea. It can also be made into an oil that looks like you captured the sun! Calendula oil can be used for compresses, poultices, suppositories, salves, creams and lotions. The juice extracted from it and added with a small amount of alcohol makes an amazing succus (used for wound healing). Remember it can also be used in salads, and dishes that call for saffron. Actions and Therapeutic uses: Calendula is one of my favorite first aide remedies. It works on all kind of skin issues. Unlike Arnica, it can be placed directly on the wound. I have seen it do amazing things; when my mother was passing away, she developed bedsores. No matter how often we turned her the bones just wore the skin away. My sister and I both had a different idea on what we should use on the sores, she used something that took a prescription and I used some Calendula salve that I had made (recipe to follow). The bedsores that I used the Calendula salve on went away 3 days quicker than the one my sister used her prescription salve on! As a vaginal douche (infusion) it will help with vaginitis, cervicitis, vaginal abrasions, erosion of the os, leucorrhea. Used as a sitz bath it is excellent for a lacerated perineum. The extract can be taken internally for fevers, menopausal problems, chronic ulcers, stagnant liver and gallbladder problems. The infusion can be used as a mouthwash for mouth ulcers and gum disease. The extract works wonders for inflamed lymph nodes and sluggish digestion. I have used it for cases of the flu because of its antiviral effects; you can use it as either an extract or a tea. A well diluted mixture of distilled water and 5 drops of the extract make an excellent eye compress for conjunctivitis. Calendula suppositories have been used for vaginal yeast infections, genital sores and other vaginal irritations. In China, the ointment of calendula is a popular topical treatment for hemorrhoids. Dosage: Infusion: One cup 3 times per day (Hoffman). For acute symptoms drink 1 cup of tea per hour until problem is gone (Tierra). Extract: 1 – 4 mls three times per day (Hoffman). 10 – 30 drops (Tierra). Contra-Indications: Pregnancy (R. Mabey) due to its uterine stimulating properties. Sources of information: Felter, Harvey Wickes MD The Eclectic Materia Medica 1922 Hoffmann, David The New Holistic Herbal 1990 Lust, John The Herb Book 1974 Mabey, Richard The New Age Herbalist 1988 Soule, Deb The Roots of Healing 1995 Tierra, Lesley The Herbs of Life 1992 Weiss, Rudolf Fritz MD Herbal Medicine 1960 Recipe: Calendula Oil & Salve If using fresh flowers from your yard: Carefully pick the flowers on a warm sunny morning after the dew is dried from the petals. Just using the ray flowers will give you and oil that is bright and vibrant. Very carefully pick the golden petals from the green base of the plant and lay them out to wilt in a brown paper bag for at least 24 hours, but no longer than 48. Place the petal into a wide mouthcanning jar, filling it to about ½ - ¾ full with the oil of your choice. I like to use almond oil, it shows off the color of calendula and you have the most beautiful yellow oil. Cover the jar with a piece of cheese cloth and secure it to the jar with a rubber band, this allows any moisture that is still in the plant to escape and not turn your oil moldy. It also keeps out any little bugs or ants that might want to dive in. Place the jar in a sunny window, if you see any condensation in the jar, carefully remove the cheesecloth and wipe away the condensation. Depending on the sunshine will determine how long it can take to make your oil. It usually takes about 3 – 4 weeks. You can also do a much quicker version using dried calendula blossoms and a slow cooker. When buying dried Calendula make sure that the flowers are still bright gold/yellow, if they are a pale color do not use them, they will not make a good medicinal oil. Again using a wide mouth-canning jar fill it ¾ full with the dried calendula blossoms and cover with oil. In the bottom of the slow cooker place the rings from the top of canning jar lids and fill the crock-pot 2/3 full with water. Set your jar filled with oil and flowers into the crock-pot, making sure that the water does not get into the jar. Also do not put the cover on the crock-pot, this will let water get into your oil and ruin it. Let it cook on low for 24 hours. When making either the fresh or the dried oil you strain it the same way. Line a large strainer with a double layer of cheesecloth; secure the cheesecloth to the strainer with cloths pins. Place the strainer over a bowl big enough to hold the oil. Carefully pour the oil and flowers into the strainer. I usually just turn the jar completely upside down and let it drip. Remove the jar and the cloths pins, gather up the edges of the cheese cloth and give the cloth a good squeeze to get all the oil out of the flowers. Pour the oil into a clean DRY jar with a tight fitting lid. You now have a jar of calendula oil just waiting to make a salve with. To make the salve: you will need to have some small containers ready. One of my favorite places to get small amounts of jars is Mt Rose Herbs; their web address is www.mountainroseherbs.com you can buy one-ounce salve jars for 85 cents per piece. You need a double boiler. For every one cup of calendula oil you will need 1/4 cup of grated beeswax (you can also get this at Mt Rose). Place the oil into the top of the double boiler along with the beeswax. Heat it slowly until the beeswax has melted. I use an old chopstick to stir with. Do not heat the oil to boiling. If you want to add fragrance and more healing power to your salve, to each jar add 4 – 5 drops of lavender essential oil. While the oil is still hot, quickly pour the oil into the jars. Let cool before putting the lids on the jars. There you go! You have just made an amazing salve. A word to the wise: it is easy to make to much salve the first time. Remember that one-cup of oil will make 8 one-ounce jars of salve. Image Provided by © Photographs by Robin Charters As an herbalist and a master gardener,Robin brings us images of her botanical photography expressing the beauty and mystery of nature. To order prints or for more information please contact Robin Charters at: Orenda Gardens, LLC 206-842-2383 Email: [email protected] Bainbridge Island, WA 5 While working as a Comfort Therapist in Hospice at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma, WA. with cancer patients nearly 15 years ago, I noticed the skin disorders that many of the patients were afflicted with such as rashes, a-topic dermatitis, eczema and psoriasis. I watched week after week as these patients applied everything from over the counter lotions to medicated prescriptions but never did I see any real healing of their skin. At that time I taught positive imagery to these patients for relaxation, stress, pain control, sleep, and many other afflictions as a Certified Hypnotherapist; as well as the fact that I was also an Esthetician (skin care) at my own Salon & Spa and later worked with plastic surgeons as a Medical Esthetician. I had suffered myself from rashes, dermatitis and eczema on and off over the years and had watched my Grandmother agonize over severe eczema on her hands. Her eczema was so extreme that her physicians wrote her up in medical journals as she was given radiation treatments and anesthetic injections to deaden the pain on top of all the topical medications she applied daily. As she aged she had lost most sensation in her fingers, her hands were deformed, scabbed and raw but “bless her heart” she never complained. I started to wonder that if I was a “skin care specialist”, how could I possibly help others if I could not help myself or my family? By this time, I would scratch the tops of my legs until they bled, my underarms itched horribly after shaving, my scalp was dry, itchy and scaly and occasionally in between my fingers I would get red little itchy bumps that drove my crazy! It finally dawned on me that perhaps I should research the ingredients in the lotions and creams 6 that we were applying to our skin. And what I found shocked me! The ingredients that are standard in most skin care formulations are petroleum plastics, perfumes, parabens, and many others that can be hormonal disrupting and cancer causing! Harmful petroleum ingredients can plasticize and “constipate” your skin, making germs more likely to get in and toxins less likely to get out of your body. As your body’s largest organ, your skin is your most important immune defense barrier as well as your largest organ for eliminating waste but it is not an impenetrable shield. Skin absorption is the number one form of chemical absorption and contamination. And believe it or not ever since 1938 when the FDA granted self-regulation to the cosmetics industry- such products can be marketed without government approval of ingredients, regardless of what tests show. Most of the 25,000 chemicals used, have not been tested for long-term toxic effects. In a typical day, you may be exposed to over 200 different chemicals, many of which are suspected of causing cancer or disrupting your hormones. Yes, it is trace amounts but the accumulative affects could be devastating for people suffering serious illnesses, cancer, disease and immune disorders. It can also be potentially harmful to babies and pregnant Mothers as well. EPA tests conclude that ingredients in shampoos, dyes, and other personal care products “may be playing havoc with hormones that control reproduction and development.” Medical research, including Brunnell University, Tufts University, Boston Research Center, and Centers of Disease Control has found these chemicals absorb through the skin and often remain in fat tissue for indefinite periods of time. These chemicals are present in our personal care, oral care and household cleaning products. Constant daily exposure slowly weakens the immune system causing longer recovery time from surgery, stress and illness. And contribute to allergies, respiratory ailments, hormone disruption, memory lapse, nervous system disorders, birth defects, sterility and cancer as well as skin irritations, itching, inflammation and the appearance of acne, brown spots, saggy skin, Rosacea, wrinkles and fine lines to name a few. Perhaps the most dramatic recent example is that parabens (a chemical used as a preservative in many personal care products) was found in breast tumors. Needless to say, I developed a line of facial, hair and body products without the use of any of the “toxic” ingredients and a miraculous thing started to occur, most everyone I shared them with would call me with incredible testimonies as to how their skin disorders were going away after years of suffering. And within about a month my own skin problems were greatly improved! And now with the passing of the “California Safe Cosmetics Act of 2005”, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the state of California, requiring any company that sells personal care products to disclose to DHS (Department of Health Services) any ingredient deemed to be a carcinogenic or reproductive toxin; only confirms that we must be proactive about the choices we make for our own health and the health and wellness of our families. I recommend reading your product labels and choose products free of any toxic, poisonous or carcinogenic ingredients. By this time I was thirsty for even more knowledge after working with a Naturopathic Physician and wanting to provide internal nutritional support for healthy-aging skin as well as the external solutions I had found. I decided to go back to college and become a Nutritional Therapy Practitioner. I was now equipped to offer the internal answers to skin disorders as well. And what I have found is that about 90% of people suffering from acne, rashes, dermatitis, eczema, psoriasis, alopecia, etc., all have possible food allergies and two definite deficiencies. One is that they are zinc deficient. Zinc is in all our cells to help us to heal and very important in aiding digestion but it takes zinc to absorb zinc so you need to ingest aqueous (liquid) zinc, which will easily get your zinc levels back to normal. I also found that aqueous zinc is very healing when used topically as well. About 25% of people who have impairment in taste and or smell are suffering from an outright zinc deficiency. The second deficiency is EFAs (Essential Fatty Acids) like fish and flax oil. The body cannot make EFAs therefore they must be obtained from the diet or through supplementation. EFAs help to maintain cell membrane function, regulate pain, inflammation and swelling; mediate immune response and promote healthy skin, among a number of other benefits as well. In addition EFAs are essential for a healthy pregnancy and promote normal fetal development. ries. In fact, we feel so strongly about our mission that we have set-up The Sandra Moroni Endowment Fund for Comfort Therapies at several hospitals. Through the purchase of any of our products, a percentage of our net proceeds will be donated to provide alternative therapies including: naturopathy, massage, counseling, skin & body care and other comfort therapies that promote healing & relaxation and decrease stress; free of charge for cancer patients who lack the ability to pay for those services. Our goal is to expand this foundation to include cancer patients from every major hospital in the country. Several years ago I teamed up with Beth Niemi who was also in the health and beauty industry as a medical skin care specialist, licensed massage therapist and as an administrator of a Plastic Surgery Center. She became interested in organic products after learning about the toxic ingredients and possible long term effects of chemicals used in the treatments and products in the medical skin care industry. Today, we are the Co-Founders of HealthyAging Organics, Inc., we are both proud to be a part of a company that provides healthy eco-friendly alternatives for products, apparel, and accessories for you, your loved ones and the environment. Dana Luchini, ME, NTP co-founder of Healthy Aging Organic, Inc. 800-599-4256 www.tuttabellaorganics.com After working with cancer patients we made a commitment to provide families with Purely Green & Organic, Toxin-Free Products and Accesso- COLLECTION Introducing the latest organic and toxin-free skin care lines and eco-friendly, fashion forward accessories to provide individuals with purely green & organic products and accessories! BEAUTIFUL FACE BEAUTIFUL BABY BEAUTIFUL MOM www.TuttaBellaOrganics.com 1.800.599.4256 • [email protected] BEAUTIFUL ANIMALS Baby Please visit Skin Care & Body Products • Diaper Bags • Bibs • Blankets T-Shirts • Maternity V-Shirts • Pet Carriers • Pet our website Purely to view Green the & Tutta Bella Organic Collection distributed Products and Collars by: • Healthy Pet Aging Leads Organics, Inc Accessories 7 By Diane Wisenberg, BS, NTP Living in darkness is not our genetic heritage. Until recent times covering our skin was to protect ourselves form the cold – not the sun. Our transportation evolved from horses to cars preventing the rays of the sun from reaching us. It has only been in the last 30 years that we began using sunscreens and avoiding the sun altogether. The most potent steroid hormone in the human body is Vitamin D. When you are deficient in Vitamin D the genes designed to protect your health can’t work properly. Our physiology is as closely linked to the sun as plants. Plants use sunlight to photosynthesize chlorophyll. Our body uses a similar process to photo synthesize Vitamin D. Sunlight and Vitamin D touch virtually every aspect of your bio chemistry and physiology. Following is just a small number of the vital roles that Vitamin D plays in your health: Regulates and assists in calcium absorption, energy metabolism, muscle strength and coordination, reduces C-reactive protein and other markers of inflammation, brain development, insulin production stimulation, helps the heart to beat properly and prevents IBS. When it comes to your bones calcium and Vitamin D have a symbiotic relationship. If either is missing, the other can’t do its job. Not only does 8 calcium have a vital role in bone health it also helps the central nervous system transmit nerve impulses, helps the muscles to contract, influences the secretion of insulin by the pancreas and regulate the immune system. You get calcium from the food you eat, or from supplements. But your body needs Vitamin D in order to absorb calcium and phosphorous from the intestinal tract. No matter how much calcium you ingest, without Vitamin D your body cannot absorb it from the small intestine. Research shows that calcium and Vitamin D deficiency in combination puts you at risk for a wide array of chronic diseases. Studies suggest that 90% of the population is deficient in one, the other, or both. Vitamin D helps prevent osteoporoses. When your body is short of calcium it pulls it from your bones. This leads to osteoporosis. Here is how it works. If there is not enough calcium in your diet or not enough Vitamin D to facilitate the absorption, then Vitamin D and the parathyroid hormone will work together to pull this mineral from the bones. The result is osteoporosis. You have Vitamin D receptors all throughout your body and scientists have found that there are also Vitamin D receptors sites throughout all the organs. Activated Vitamin D is one of the most potent regulators of cell growth in both normal and cancerous cells. The more activated Vitamin D your body can create the better. In fact, billions of cells use Vitamin D to respond to a wide variety of diseases and help the body heal. It is one of the most potent powerful nutrients you can give to your body. (Dr. John Cannell’s article “The Secrets of Vitamin D Production”). If you are not getting out in the sun for 15-20 minutes almost daily and not eating appropriate Vitamin D rich foods or taking supplements, you are at high risk for a deficiency. The best way to know if you are deficient is to have a yearly measurement of 25hydroxyvitamin D as part of your annual physical exam. The test you should ask for is a 25-hydroxyvitamin D test. This test measures levels of calcidiol in your blood. Optimal 25-hydroxyvitamin D values are: 50-60 ng/mlor or 125-160 nmol/l Also, when looking at your results you may see seasonal variations. Your levels will likely be lower in the winter than in the summer. You Don’t Need to Burn to Get Your Vitamin D Here are some basic guidelines to responsible sun exposure: 1. Fair-skinned, 10-20 minutes of high summer sun will produce adequate Vitamin D levels. Skin with a moderate amount of pigmentation, 20-40 minutes. Those with the darkest skin may need up to two hours to meet daily Vitamin D requirements. 2. If you are going to be in the sun longer than what you need for Vitamin D, take measures to cover you most sensitive skin – usually your face, shoulders, and the back of your legs. 3. Natural Sunscreens – Sunscreens with zinc oxide as the active ingredient go on thick, but they are safe and effective. Zinc oxide protects against both UV-A and UV-B rays, and zinc oxide remains stable even when exposed to UV radiation unlike the active ingredients found in most sunscreens. 4. Give some thought to how much exposure you are going to get, and act accordingly. ESSENTIAL INFORMATION For patients and health care practitioners. This one hormone can dramatically reduce the chances of developing a chronic disease…and if your levels are low Biotics makes a wonderful, easy to take supplement called Bio-DMulsion Forte. I would recommend 2 drops per day. If you or someone you know is severely deficient I would suggest starting on 5 drops a day for 30 days then reduce to 2 drops a day. Diane Weisenberg, BS, NTP Diane is an educator, researcher, and a spirited and passionate forager of whole foods, health and nutrition. As a Practice Manager for a Holistic Veterinary Clinic she is also involved in small animal nutrition. My Motto: Stay curious and get to know the body you were gifted with. My Vitamin D level in May of 2007 was 29. Sometime around OctoberNovember I started taking 2-3 drops a day of Bio-D-Mulsion Forte. I also made sure I increased my Cod Liver Oil during December and January. I had my Vitamin D level checked on February 12, 2008 and it is 65. PUBLISHED BY THE PRICE-POTTENGER NUTRITION FOUNDATION™ NEW EXPANDED EDITION FIFTY-SIX NEW PHOTOS ENHANCED PHOTO QUALITY EXPANDED TEXT The perfect gift for family or friends! PRICE-POTTENGER NUTRITION FOUNDATION™ Preserving the work of Weston A. Price DDS and other health pioneers. Providing access to accurate information on nutrition. Founded in 1952. ORDER TODAY 619-462-7600 1-800-366-3748 (in US) QUANTITY PRICING AVAILABLE PPNF™ YOUR SOURCE FOR BOOKS, AUDIO & VISUAL CALL FOR RESOURCE CATALOG OR VISIT www.ppnf.org 9 By Yaakov Levine, NTP I often enjoy a cup of tea while at work, reading, or as a dessert. My favorite these days is a blend of holy basil, chamomile and rose essence which is flavorful, aromatic, and soothing. Herbal teas, which are steeped for 2-5 minutes offer us many benefits. They are colorful, and tasty and may contain various plant (phyto)chemicals that promote health and longevity. important minerals we must have them in our foods. Unfortunately much of the soil used to grow our vegetables on an industrial level is depleted of minerals, and if the minerals are not in the soil they will not be in our food. Herbal infusions are a great way to supplement the minerals in your diet. Are you experiencing leg cramps at night, or not getting as much out of your workout as you’d like? Drink nutritious herbal infusions throughout the day, and you will feel more energy, vitality. 10 Any herbs that do not contain many volatile oils, resins, or alkaloids are good choices for nutritious infusions. Three of my favorites are nettles, One of my favorite nutritious herbs is mineral rich stinging nettles (Urtica dioica). According to herbalist Susun Weed, an overnight infusion of As a nutritional therapist I am always looking for the nutritional value of what I eat and drink. I have found that herbal infusions are the most nutritious form of tea. As opposed to a tea which is steeped for 2-5 minutes, an infusion is steeped for at least four hours and in my case overnight. Since the minerals and other nutrients are made more accessible by drying, dried herbs are the best choice. Minerals, which support the health of our bones and tissues, make up 4% of our bodies. Minerals are classified as Macro minerals (large), such as calcium, magnesium, and Micro minerals (small), including iron and chromium. These and other minerals act as cofactors for enzyme reaction, help maintain our pH, and support healthy nerve conduction. Since our bodies cannot produce these I make my infusions at night before I go to sleep. I use one quart mason jars, in which I will put 2-4 tablespoons or more of dried herb, fill to the top with boiling water, then close tightly and let sit overnight. In the morning I strain the infusion, squeezing the liquid out of the plant, and then enjoy throughout the day. Trifolium pretense-Red Clover Urtica dioica-Stinging Nettles nettles will yield 500mg. of calcium per cup. She found that if you steep the nettles for 2-5 minutes, you only end up with 5-10mg. of calcium per cup. Nettles are also a source of iron, and silicon which supports healthier skin and hair. oatstraw, and red clover. Nettles are rich in minerals, and helps nourish the adrenals, kidneys, blood vessels, skin, and hair. Oatstraw (Avena sativa) is a great longevity tonic, and supports the nervous system. Red Clover (Trifolium pretense) blossoms are a great blood purifier, increase blood flow, and contain isoflavones that help improve your “good” cholesterol. Infusions generally taste great! You can add honey or cream if you’d like, and I sometimes will add a small amount (tsp) of mint to my infusion mixture. As the weather gets warmer try some iced Red Clover infusion with a touch of mint. I do suggest you try the herbs one at a time to get to know them before blending. Some other nutritious choices for infusion are: linden flower (Tillia americana), which has anti-flu properties, soothes the lungs and digestive system, and supports cardiovascular function, and comfrey leaf which supports healing of skin, bones, mucus membranes, and skin, A note about Comfrey: while the roots of wild comfrey, (Symphytum officionale) contain pyrrolizidine alkaloids, that can cause liver congestion, the leaves of cultivated Images Provided by comfrey, (symphytum uplandia) are free of this constituent. © Photographs by Robin Charters A great source of dried bulk herbs is Mountain Rose Herbs in Pleasant Hill, OR. (www.mountainroseherbs.com). They are one of the largest suppliers of organic bulk herbs in the country and are known for their consistent quality. If you would like addition information regarding herbal infusions, contact me at: (541) 8952427 or [email protected]. To learn about the many uses of herbs as medicine, food, and body care join me at the Breitenbush Herbal Conference Sept 4-7, 2008. For more information check out our website: www.breitenbushherbalconference. net As an herbalist and a master gardener,Robin brings us images of her botanical photography expressing the beauty and mystery of nature. With the love of tending a garden and as a grower of medicinal herbs and food, she observes daily the mystery of tiny seeds coming into life, watching them grow and bloom, then become food, medicine or pleasure for the senses. Enjoy! To order prints or for more information please contact Robin Charters at: Orenda Gardens, LLC 206-842-2383 Email: [email protected] Bainbridge Island, WA real nutrition for real people. Food is meant to nourish our bodies. Food is meant to grow in a particular, natural way in order to do so. This is where you and your nutrition become what they were Meant To Be. Purchase food and learn more at: meanttobefoods.com Nutrientsdense foods are available for delivery: beef bone broth, organic grass fed beef jerky, cultured vegetables, soaked and dried nuts and more. Thanks to all who came, tasted and enjoyed at the NTA Conference! 11 The NTP’s Guide to Supporting Dry Eye Syndrome (cont) Continued from page... 2 The mucin layer which touches the cornea nourishes the front of the eye. This layer serves as an anchor for the tear film helping it adhere to the eye and keeps the eye moist. Aqueous from the lacrimal gland forms the middle layer of tear film incorporating the water soluble components of the tear film. It provides moisture, oxygen and nutrients to the cornea. he lipid layer is produced by the Meibomiam glands of the eyelids. It is our front line of defense against evaporation, infection, solar radiation and injury to the outside of the ocular surface. It creates a smooth surface for light to pass through the eye. It also keeps the tears from evaporating maintaining the structural integrity of the tear film, and provides a smooth tear film over the cornea when we blink. Each of the three layers is driven by nutrition. Each has varying concentrations of vitamins and minerals which promote proper structure and function of each of the segments. Educated Nutritional Therapy Practitioners understand how to restore and/or maintain structural integrity in order to influence function at each level of the tear film. Repletion of nutrients that saturate ocular tissues is vital for influencing structure and creating proper function. As a result vision is improved and contact lens wearers find a more comfortable fit. The concept of repletion cannot be overemphasized. On the ocular terrain, the cornea is two thirds of the refractive power of the eye. We must nourish all the layers that make up tear film. If the refracting surface doesn’t have integrity, good vision is 12 not likely even with glasses or contact lenses. Each of the three layers has special requirements to do their individual jobs: The mucin layer requires Vitamin A in (the form of retinol) which plays a central role in the development of the mucin of the tear film. Vitamin A deficiency is a cause of Goblet cell atrophy and loss of the important innermost lubricating mucin layer. The lacrimal gland’s secretions are promoted by micronutrients like zinc, magnesium and Vitamin C, B6 and niacin. Amazingly, the lacrimal gland has hormone receptors in it and tear film is influenced by hormonal fluctuations. The oily layer needs essential fatty acids, both Omega 3 from flax, fish oils and algae, and Omega 6 in the form of evening primrose oil, borage oil or black currant seed oil in order to create structural integrity in its segment of the three part layer that makes up the ocular terrain. Inflammatory cells take up GLA, convert it to DGLA, which in turn is a potent inhibitor of arachadonic acid (AA) conversion into inflammatory messengers. Zinc is a major player in construction of a healthy corneal surface having the highest concentration in the entire body in the cornea of the eye. As we know, many are deficient in zinc. We can administer the Zinc Challenge test as one measure in assessing the integrity of the cornea. Maintaining healthy terrain on the ocular surface is more important than we realize. If DES goes untreated, it can cause fluctuations in vision, and the cornea can become scratched, scarred and ulcerated. Zinc sufficiency is a good place to start. There is Comprehensive Metabolic Profile testing available to determine where to focus repletion efforts most effectively. Bioindividuality is key when considering treatment options for DES; strategies become complex when we factor in: Smoking which disrupts the way carotenoids are used in the eye and the smoke itself being an irritant exacerbating DES Inflammatory, allergenic and/or nutritionally deficient dietary pattern Gallbladder surgery and subsequent diminished fat processing Gender bias to DES with predilection to peri and post-menopausal women DES occurring secondary to systemic illnesses such as Diabetes or Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) DES as a result of prescription and over-the-counter drug use. DES in post surgery (Lasik, PRK and Cataract) patients Reducing systemic inflammation becomes the number one therapy for treating DES which has an inflammatory component. We teach a modified Mediterranean diet, removing gluten, dairy and known sensitivities to reduce inflammation. The Hale Project reported in JAMA in 2004, confirming the success of the MeDi diet and lifestyle (non smoking, moderate exercise and whole foods, largely plant based diet) in reducing mortality and morbidity from all causes after ten years adherence to the MeDi in individuals aged 70-90. What a successful lifestyle program! What is good for the body is good for the eyes. Initially a healthy inflammatory reaction serves purposes of tissue isolation and protection from further injury so that the body can initiate a healing response. However, an inflammatory response that does not turn itself off upsets the balance in our body. Through the modified MeDi, our goal is to limit systemic inflammation by calming inflammation signals. One particular Medical Food we prescribe employs selective kinase response modulation to calm inflammation systemically which has a positive impact on supporting proper tear film layers as well as the whole system. Combined with the MeDi, currently the most effective treatment for DES we’ve used is a combination of Omega 3 and Omega 6 fatty acids, a blend of A, D, E, C and the cofactors B6, Biotin, magnesium and zinc. Getting the materials to the “jobsite” is only half the picture. Transporting them to their optimal location is the rest of the goal. Adding digestive enzymes assures proper digestion and assimilation. Gender bias and DES: In a March 2007 study out of Bologna, Italy researchers determined that “subjective symptoms, tear production and stability, surface dryness and inflammation were significantly related to hormonal fluctuations in the menstrual cycle in perimenopausal women. In particular, the impairment of these functions appeared to be related to the estrogen peak occurring during the follicular phase, especially in patients with dry eye.” Hormone balancing is an often overlooked aspect of repletion. Both peri and post menopausal women report an increased incidence of dry eye. Recall that there are hormone receptors in the lacrimal glands which respond to support. We also know that DES is correlated with hormone replacement therapy (HRT) use in postmenopausal women. Now that synthetic HRT has fallen out of favor, we can impact dry eye by aiming to regulate estrogen, progesterone, DHEA and testosterone naturally. I would encourage everyone to read Douglas Hall, M.D’s. excellent article entitled Nutritional Influences on Estrogen Metabolism: A Summary to master this important and often overlooked aspect of repletion. It is available on my website www.nutritionalvisions.com. The concept of macro and micro nutrient deficiency secondary to systemic disease and its impact on DES is fascinating to consider. DES can accompany systemic diseases like diabetes and RA. DES is acerbated by prescription and OTC drugs and can also emerge as the result of multiple micronutrient deficiencies that occur as a result of their use. The resulting deficiencies can manifest as ocular disease, visual dysfunction or ocular conditions such as DES. Those with diabetes have a higher incidence of DES and are a great example of being aware that certain dis- ease states will require repletion over and above a healthy population. Diabetics typically have about 30% less circulating Vitamin C than non diabetic individuals and less magnesium as well. They are already experiencing greater oxidative stress due to the disease process, and are compromised in vitamins and minerals unless they are supplementing or consistently eating exceptionally well. Again, we see the effect of deficiencies or a “cascade effect” associated with systemic disease (one disease leading to another disease, condition or syndrome); an Indian study reported in 2006, Ophthalmic Epidemiology finds “Patients with RA in the Indian population have a significantly higher prevalence and severity of dry eye when compared to ageand sex-matched controls.” We can assume these findings would cross ethnic boundaries. If we are in a proinflammatory state, we may develop other conditions. Studies reporting on nutrition and supplementation impact on DES are encouraging and growing in number. One 2006 study found that flax seed oil worked to reduce DES equally as well as the oral anti-inflammatory drug Doxycycline prescribed for severe dry eye. Colin C.K. Chan. MD speculated in the publication that the reason may be due to its anti-inflammatory, lipid modifying properties. He presented his ideas at the annual meeting of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery; mainstream exposure to nutritional therapies is occurring with more acceptance. Often correcting existing imbalances between Omega 3 and Omega 6 from animal fat or vegetable oils will alleviate dry eye. Typically, GLA should be taken in an equal ratio to Continued on page... 14 13 The NTP’s Guide to Supporting Dry Eye Syndrome (cont) Continued from page... 13 EPA-DHA, in a background of flax oil. Studies report that Omega 3 and Omega 6 fatty acids in combination results in increased PGE1 which both stimulates aqueous tear secretion and reduces the production of PGE2 which acts as an inflammatory agent. (Wu D, Maydani M, Leka L., American Journal of Clinical Nutrition) K.A.Trivedi and colleagues at Harvard Medical School in Boston, MA report, “Women with higher dietary intake of Omega 3 fatty acid were at decreased risk of developing DES”. An interesting study appeared in the March 2008 issue of Arthritis Research & Therapy 2008 that has the potential to augment dry eye therapy in RA patients. Results concluded that a “gluten-free vegan diet in RA induces changes that are potentially atheroprotective and anti-inflammatory, including decreased LDL and oxLDL levels and raised anti-PC IgM and IgA levels.” “The anti-inflammatory properties of the fatty acid GLA have long been known. Recent studies report that oral administration of GLA and LA leads to a significant increase in tear concentrations of anti-inflammatory prostaglandin E1 and reduces the symptoms of dry eye. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of GLA and LA on tear production, tear fluorescein clearance, dry eye symptoms, and the ocular surface after PRK . The researchers concluded that oral precursors of prostaglandin E1, GLA and LA, could be helpful in increasing tear production and clearance after PRK”. Arch Opthal 2002 (PRK is a surgical procedure for the correction of vision, much like Lasik) We have much at our disposal today in the form of research, healthy dietary options and supplements that can resolve even tough issues like Dry Eye Syndrome. For information on product lines we have found effective for treating and supporting DES, email [email protected] If you would like a copy of the nationwide teleseminar we did December 2007 on Nutritional Solutions for Eye Care, particularly ones that are untreatable with drugs or surgery like macular degeneration, please send a request and $5 (to cover shipping and the $1 CD charge) to Medical Vision Center and Nutritional Visions Natural Health Center, P.O. Box AC, Morton, WA 98356. MEDICAL CENTER & NUTRITIONAL VISIONS & NATURAL HEALTH CENTER Donald A. Carroll, O.D., NTP Optometric Physician Kat Carroll, NTP, CPO Functional Medicine Approach for Ocular Health Retinal Thickness Analyzer for Early Detection and Management of Glaucoma, Macular Degeneration, Diabetic Retinopathy & Macular Edema Option of Natural Therapies for Most Eye Conditions Cataract and Lasik Surgery Co-Management Dry Eye Detection & Natural Treatment Options Designer Eyewear & Maui Jim Sunwear Contact Lenses- All Designs Phone consults available Unlock Vibrant Well-being, Longevity, & Radiant Beauty Modified Mediterranean Diet & Medical Foods Education & Cooking Anti-Aging and Life Extension Therapies Total Body Detoxification Therapies: Far Infrared & Turkish Steam Saunas Support for IBS, Crohn’s, Dysbiosis, GERD, Candida Natural Hormone Therapies, Detox, & Balancing 100% Natural, Chirally Correct Skincare from Inside Out Nutritional Therapy for Eye Diseases & Conditions Register at www.nutritionalvisions.com for free e-newsletter & research library Coaching & Consulting Packages available by phone or e-mail [email protected] ~ ask for Nutritional Therapy for Eyes CD info! Office Hours: Monday – Thursday 9am-5pm, Friday 9am-3pm Office email: [email protected] 240 West Main Street/ P.O. Box AC, Morton WA 98356 (360) 496-5140 Fax: (360) 496-6039 14 Sea Vegetables – The Traditional Mineral Supplement by Bob Quinn, L.Ac., DAOM In the 1930’s and 40’s a brilliant nutritional pioneer, Dr. Weston Price, visited diverse native groups around the globe to try to find the common dietary thread connecting their diets— diets that were supporting populations that enjoyed a level of health we in the modern day can only dream about. Price, a Cleveland area dentist, had launched his project out of concern for the rapidly deteriorating health of his patients, particularly the young. The insights in his book, Diet and Physical Degeneration, are far-ranging and deserve a thorough reading. In this article I look at his work on minerals, but it should be noted that his investigations turned up other important common factors in these diets that are beyond the scope of our discussion here. Price discovered upon analysis of the foods consumed by these native groups that they were found to contain at least four times and up to ten times the macro-mineral content of the standard diet of the day in America. Linger there for a moment with that number. What kind of house can you build if you have only a quarter of the necessary materials? Remember this was in the 1930’s and 40s, and the soils in which our food is grown have since then been further depleted of their minerals, and we have grown used to the consumption of highly processed foods. The very processing that makes foods fast and convenient to prepare devitalizes them and reduces their mineral content. We are in sad shape in North America if these native diets are taken as a measure of what is needed to sustain health, but I believe that to be the unfortunate truth of the matter. If Dr. Price had known to analyze the trace mineral levels, I suspect he would have found a similar story. Only in relatively recent years has information about the key role of trace elements come into focus in the scientific community. Despite the exceedingly small amounts of these elements that our bodies require, they are nonetheless crucial for health. Many serve as key catalysts in essential processes in our bodies. When we deplete these trace elements in our soil, the plants growing there are weaker and susceptible to disease. It is no different in our bodies. For those who, upon hearing this, try to find solace in the fact that they eat organically grown foods, I have bad news. According to the USDA charts found in Paul Bergner’s The Healing Power of Minerals, commercially grown foods in the 1960s had a significantly higher mineral content compared to organic produce of the early 1990s. And both pale in comparison to the mineral content of foods from the 1930s. Not a pretty picture. Clearly, simply resorting to an all-organic diet is not going to provide minerals in sufficient quantities to match the native diets that Dr. Price researched. If insufficient minerals are in the soil, where can we go to find adequate amounts for our health maintenance? Dr. Price noted the great efforts natives in the Andes Mountains made to obtain seaweed and other treasures of the sea, a sea that was two hundred miles away. The second group he visited lived on small islands off the coast of Scotland, and their diet was built around oats, cod, and other seafoods, including sea vegetables. What was it that these native groups recognized in these foods? In a word: Minerals (They have other valuable qualities as well, but it is beyond the scope of this article to explore them.). The most nutritious land plants grown in the very best soil are all quite mineraldeficient if we use sea vegetables as the standard. All the commonly consumed sea vegetables are virtual treasure troves of mineral nutrition. It is worthy of at least a brief mention here that Dr. Price observed significant damage from the inclusion of even small amounts of modern foods, what he called the displacing foods of modern commerce, in the native diets he studied. If even slightly less than a fifth of the food came from modern sources (he was referring to commercial oils, white flour, white sugar), the children born to those people would have diminished health evidenced as crowded teeth, narrower faces, cavities, less energy and so on. He took nearly 20,000 pictures on his journeys and the difference between the children on a pure native diet and those with partial inclusion of modern foods is clear for anyone to see. So, it is important not only to include sea vegetables in the diet, but to also eliminate, or at least to severely limit, Continued on page 16... 15 Sea Vegetables – The Traditional Mineral Supplement (cont) Continued from page... 15 the consumption of these displacing foods of modern commerce. The Japanese have the only modern diet that has retained a significant role for seaweed in its cuisine. Statistics tell us that they are doing something right—the Japanese live longer than any other modern people, and this despite a highly stressful work life that undoubtedly has negative health consequences. Some researchers have speculated that it is perhaps the greater soy consumption in Japan that explains their longevity, but a serious look at Price’s work leads one to suspect it is more likely the added minerals and other nutritional factors in the seaweed and other seafoods. How much seaweed should one consume? According to Dr. Ryan Drum, a noted seaweed expert in the Western herbal community, a good ballpark number is 3-5 grams per day of dried seaweed. This is roughly a kilogram per year per person. Eating a variety of seaweeds is the ideal. However, if one is not accustomed to having sea vegetables in the diet, it is advised to start with just a gram a day for a time before slowly increasing it. With its high iodine content sea vegetables generally have a positive impact on thyroid function, but it is best to proceed with caution. If negative changes are noted, the seaweed consumption should be discontinued. Because of the epidemic of hypothyroidism in modern life, particularly among middle-aged women, I thought I might mention one brown algae, Fucus vesiculosus (common name: bladderwrack), known to have a positive impact on the thyroid. This seaweed grows 16 abundantly throughout the temperate zones and can be easily harvested off the rocks where it attaches itself. It is easily identified through its small, heart-shaped bladders. These bladders contain a mucilaginous substance that is high in essential fatty acids. Although it would be a terrible diet, humans can exist for a long time on nothing but dried Fucus and water. Fucus contains a compound called DIT (diiotothyronine) that our bodies can use to easily construct a T4 molecule; no other sea vegetable is known to contain this substance. Unfortunately, bladderwrack is not especially tasty, even for die-hard seaweed fans, so that taking it in capsules becomes the recommended route for hypothyroid patients. A number of companies produce Fucus capsules and most natural food stores carry them. I generally start people at 1 gram per day of the dried bladderwrack and move it slowly up to 3 grams per day. If someone has been on thyroid hormone medication for a long time, you will not likely wean them off, but if you do, they will require daily use of Fucus just as they do their medicine. As with any supplement or special food, if there are adverse reactions, the patient should be advised to discontinue use immediately. It is a food and very safe, but idiosyncratic reactions are always possible. When harvesting one’s own seaweed, a practice I highly recommend, a few key pointers are worth mentioning: First, find out if there is a nearby municipal sewage outfall or septic system. Seaweeds are like thirsty sponges for any ambient minerals that pass by their neighborhood, and whether or not the substances picked up are healthy for humans is not a concern of theirs. Be clear: People have died from eating contaminated sea vegetables. Second, do not harvest plants washed up on a sandy beach; it is far better to harvest from the rocks at water’s edge. It is impossible to remove all the sand that the mucilaginous coating on the seaweed will pick up from the beach. A certain broken tooth awaits any who avoid this warning. Third, do not rinse your harvest in fresh water; seawater rinsing is better. Fourth, dry the seaweed as soon after harvest as possible and then seal it in moistureproof containers. Fifth, never put your harvest in plastic trash bags. These bags are coated with a toxic chemical that ensures anything put in them will become de facto rubbish. Instead, use plastic produce bags from the supermarket or a food-grade plastic bucket. For many modern people including seaweed in the diet is an unpalatable option. They should be reminded that tastes do change and encouraged to start with just a small amount; some sea vegetables have a stronger taste than others. For those who are hopelessly fussy about their food, the option of using powdered seaweed in capsules should be explored. Toasted nori is usually an easy stretch for the typical North American palate. Many Americans have an easy time starting with dulse (Palmaria palmata), a red algae with a mild and quite agreeable flavor. (Irish cattle and horses have been observed eating dulse from the rocks on beaches.) It does not need to be cooked and is easily cut with scissors into salads. A brief personal story about dulse might be of interest here. In 1977 I hitchhiked around Ireland for a month while on semester break from university in Germany. In one tiny Irish coastal community I observed children on their bicycles going into a corner grocery and emerging with little paper sacks filled with paperthin maroonish-purple strips that they greedily pushed into their mouths. I wandered into the store to see what they were eating, imagining I would find a homegrown type of candy. Instead I discovered they were eating dulse. I was astounded that nutritious seaweed had replaced candy for these children. The bags were selling for five pence, so I bought one and thus started my love affair with this delicious sea vegetable. As it turns out elderly men in this community harvested and dried the dulse and sold it as a way of making a little money. My final word is to not underestimate what improvements in health are possible for your patients if you help them increase their intake of minerals by eating sea vegetables regularly. Practitioners should realize though that the health benefits from seaweed consumption do not show up overnight. We need to counsel our clients to have patience as their bodies learn to utilize the added nutrition. It will be worth the wait. Bob Quinn practices meridian therapy, herbal medicine, Sotai, and Thai massage in Portland, OR and supervises in the clinic of the Oregon College of Oriental Medicine. In Memoriam Dr. George Goodhart passed away at his home on March 5th, 2008 at the age of 89. Early in his career as a Chiropractor Dr. Goodhart discovered the relationship between muscle function and health which eventually lead to a unique testing method referred to as Applied Kinesiology (AK) on which the College of Applied Kinesiology (ICAK) was founded. Dr. Goodhart’s dedication to holistic health and wellness was recognized by his Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003 by Standard Process. NTA In the Alumni Greater Seattle area Interested in connecting with other NTP’s? Contact Carol Johnson at [email protected] Or Birgitte Antonsen at [email protected] Networking Sharing Teaching Learning Fun We will facilitate getting together and are interested in your ideas to build an active Alumni group in our area. Limited Supply Balancing Body Chemistry with Nutrition Software & Manual Dr. Harry Eidenier, PhD, is widely considered the Grandfather of Blood Chemistry and a pioneer in his field for establishing the Functional ranges for blood work. His software allows the practitioner to enter blood chemistry data and generate reports detailing a protocol. Dr. Eidenier’s software and reference materials are important tools for any practitioner. $275 NTA We at NTA would like to thank all of our contributing authors and advertisers. Thank you for taking the time and effort to help inform, educate, inspire and delight all of us in the NTA community. NTA is pleased to announce our new Referral Reward Program exclusively for NTPs with current NTA member status. As of January 2008, NTPs who refer new students to the Nutritional Therapist Training Program will receive a $100 cash award for each student who enrolls based on their referral. If you would like to submit a Book Review, Article or Favorite Recipe, please contact the NTA office at (800) 918-9798. Ad space is also available, please call for rates. 17 I just wanted to let you know how much I enjoyed the 1st Annual NTA Conference! There were so many excellent speakers to choose from and I came away with lots of valuable information as well as new ideas for my own personal growth! It was wonderful to meet the NTA staff and make connections with more of my fellow NTPs and other nutrition-minded practitioners. I could really feel the strength of our growing community and the power in our numbers. We really are changing the world one person at a time, and together, we are quite a force. The banquet and entertainment on Saturday night was an absolute blast and the band was so much fun to dance to! The vendors were very educational and it was fun to see the how those, who were graduates, have utilized their nutrition careers. Thanks again for all your hard work in providing this wonderful event! I will definitely be there again next year. Bev Hartsfield, NTP, Portland, OR Julia Ross, MA, MFT-Carbohydrate Addition (w/ Conference Welcome by Gray Graham, NTP) Jerry Brunetti-Sustainable Agriculture Jerry Brunetti-Food as Medicine Dr. Daniel Chong-The Truth About Cholesterol Dr. Paul Varnas-Nutritional Counseling: Going Beyond Clinical Results Julia Ross, MA, MFT-Amino Acid Therapy: Issues in Assessment & Treatment Bob Quinn, L.Ac, DAOM-Sea Vegetables: The Real Mineral Supplements Colleen Dunseth, CCHT, NTP-Hormones: The Beauty & Tragedy. A Nutritional Primer *NTA members receive a 10% discount on DVDs. Please note that shipping and handling charges do apply. 18 “The sessions were extremely informative. I found that I attended talks on topics that were new to me…fascinating. I learned ways to replenish the soil in my garden, learned some new perspectives on hormones and absolutely loved everything that Jerry Brunetti had to offer. He was GRAND! I also loved the relaxation station. That was a brilliant idea. The entire conference was time and money well spent – a great value.” Melissa Stambaugh, NTP Certified Healing Foods SpecialistTM (CHFS) 2008 Training Program - Maine & California Become an expert at preparing Cultured and Whole Foods Cuisine with hands-on training. Start a Healing Foods cottage industry in your area - support local farms and create jobs! Begin a new career in the Healing Arts as a CHFS, Master CHFS, and future CHFS instructor! Educate and train others through lectures, workshops, demos and tastings. Discover better health for you, your family and your clients through therapeutic nutrition. Based on teachings of Weston A. Price, DDS, Dr. Elson Haas, Dr. Ann Wigmore and Dr. Francis Pottenger, Jr. www.immunitrition.com Sign up today! 877-773-9229 EFA-Sirt Supreme™ supplies a unique, highly concentrated essential fatty acid blend, providing a extremely effective relative combination of EPA, DHA and GLA, with all natural mixed tocopherols, specially formulated to be high in g(gamma)-Tocopherol. Why do your patients need EFA-Sirt Supreme™? The unique composition of EFA-Sirt Supreme™ provides a balance of key nutrients that current research has shown to support healthy cardiovascular function. A large amount of supportive scientific research shows that the consumption of Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) Omega-3 fatty acids may reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. Omega-3 fatty acids (FA) have been shown to affect platelet aggregation, blood viscosity, plasma levels of fibrinogen, PF4 and beta-thromboglobulin and capillary flow. These effects are believed to be functions of membrane fluidity. Omega-3 fatty acids support healthy blood lipid profiles, normal healthy blood pressure, stimulate Nitric Oxide (NO) and support healthy, normal blood sugar and insulin levels. Omega-3 fatty acids help to suppress ACE, TGA beta, SREBP and function as PPAR agonists. Additionally, Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation increases FA oxidation, which research suggests helps to decrease adipose tissue and serves to improve endothelial function. Call Biotics Research NW, Inc. for additional information at: 800-636-6913 or visit www.bioticsnw.com These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. 19 Schedule of Events* Keep checking our website for updated information throughout the summer!! 12:00pm-6:30pm 8:00pm-9:30pm Saturday: Opening Ceremony Keynote 1 & 2 Breakout Session 1 Breakout Session 2 Banquet 9:00am-9:30am 9:45am-1:00pm 2:30pm-3:45pm 4:00pm-5:15pm 6:30pm Sunday: Keynote 1 & 2 9:00am-12:30pm Keynote 3 2:00pm-3:30pm Closing Ceremony 3:45pm-4:30pm *Schedule subject to change. PO Box 354 Olympia, WA 98507 (800) 918-9798 www.nutritionaltherapy.com The Conference will open Friday afternoon with an intensive keynote address as well as a screening of a relevant film. Speakers will present on various topics surrounding nutrition and mental health. Friday: Keynote Part 1 & 2 Movie ew! Ele ctron Email i c P D F versi nta@n on utri to t h e o nline N tionaltherap of the News le tte y.co u tr i t i o n a l Thera m to subscri r available. p i s t n ewslet be te r. N NTA 20