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Weight loss,
the anti-aging way
by James South MA;
to order
Weight loss and dieting is a perennial subject of
conversation, TV talk shows, best-selling books, and even trips to the doctor.
And no wonder. In spite of the widespread introduction of "low fat",
"no fat", and "reduced fat" foods and snacks throughout the
1990's, obesity has reached epidemic proportions in much of the Western world.
Obesity (defined as being 20% or more over "ideal" or
"normal" weight for one's size) is now estimated to afflict 35-40% of
adults in America. "Common sense" says that the obvious way to avoid
or reduce unwanted weight gain is simply to eat less calories.
Since carbohydrates (sugars and starches) and
protein each provide only 4 calories (of energy content) per gram, while fat
provides 9 calories per gram, and since it's those unsightly bulges of fat we
want to avoid or rid ourselves of to begin with - then just reduce the fat in
one's diet, and slimness is "just a bite away."
Unfortunately, this "common sense"
approach to weight (fat) loss misses the mark in many ways. One hint should be
obvious from the way that cattle, hogs and other livestock are fed to rapidly
fatten them up at feedlots just before slaughter. Are they fed lard, dairy fat,
vegetable oil, margarine, etc.? No. They are fed corn to rapidly fatten them up!
Yet corn contains less than 5% fat - it is almost 90% carbohydrate. And what
about those "low fat" foods widely introduced during the very 1990's
decade when America's incidence of obesity increased by a whopping 30-40%? While
some were lower fat dairy products and leaner cuts of meats, most of these
nouveau "foods" were low-fat cereals, pasta, cookies, snack bars, corn
and potato chips, cakes, ice creams, etc. Virtually all of these (high profit)
manufactured "foods" are high in sugar/starch and low in protein.
Then there is the so-called "French
paradox." The French are significantly less afflicted than America with
heart disease and obesity - both conditions allegedly produced by an excessive
fat intake, yet the French eat comparable amounts of meat and fish, four times
as much butter, and twice as much cheese (all fat-rich foods) as Americans.
Interestingly, the French consume only about 18% as much sugar as Americans. (1)
By now, dear reader, you should be getting the
hint that obesity is far more related to carbohydrate consumption than fat
intake. Yet even obese people have only 1-2 pounds of carbohydrate stored in
their body, as glycogen - a muscle/liver - stored starch. So how can a high
carbohydrate, reduced fat diet promote weight gain among Americans, while a high
fat, low sugar diet doesn't fatten Frenchmen nearly as much?
The answer lies not with the dietary ingredients
themselves, but rather in the hormonal and biochemical reactions these
metabolically different food categories (fat, carbohydrate, protein) elicit in
the human body. And the chief hormonal culprit in promoting excess body fat
(technically called "white adipose tissue") is - Insulin.
THE INSULIN - GLUCAGON FAT CONNECTION
Insulin is a large polypeptide hormone secreted
by the beta-cells of the pancreas. Insulin release is directly controlled by
dietary factors. "Glucose [blood sugar] is the principal stimulus to
insulin secretion in human beings.... Insulin lowers the concentration of
glucose in blood by inhibiting hepatic [liver] glucose production and by
stimulating the uptake of glucose by muscle and adipose tissue.... Under normal
conditions, insulin inhibits lipolysis [the breakdown of stored body fat for use
as organ/muscle fuel], stimulates fatty acid synthesis [from both sugars and
fats]... and decreases the hepatic concentration of carnitine [carnitine
"shuttles" fatty acids into mitochondria in most cells for use as ATP
energy fuel]." (2)
"Insulin stimulates the fat cells to take up
fat and sugar from the blood and store it away as body fat, especially in the
middle of the body, within the abdomen and around the vital organs." (3)
"Overweight people tend to have higher basal [baseline] levels of insulin;
hyperinsulinemia [high blood insulin] which promotes lipogenesis
[fat-formation]." (4)
Insulin is the chief hormone the body uses to
lower excessively high blood sugar. The entire bloodstream of a normal,
non-diabetic human contains less than 5 grams - a level teaspoonful - of glucose
at any one time. It is thus relatively easy to stimulate a rapid rise in blood
sugar through sugar - food ingestion. Eating a candy bar or drinking a soft
drink will normally raise blood sugar - and blood insulin - within minutes. And
while starch foods (starches are chains of sugar molecules, broken down during
digestion) may be slightly slower to raise blood sugar and insulin, the modern
industrialized starches, such as white flour and finely ground corn meal, used
to make pasta, bread, cakes, corn chips and tortillas, crackers, cookies, etc.,
are digested and absorbed almost as quickly as simple sugar foods.
Insulin has a hormonal partner in regulating and
fine-tuning blood sugar levels - glucagon, also secreted by the pancreas.
"The secretion of glucagon is regulated by dietary glucose, insulin, amino
acids, and fatty acids; glucose is a potent [glucagon] inhibitor.... [The
metabolic effects of glucagon] are normally opposed by insulin, and when
equivalent equations of both hormones are present, insulin is predominant."
(2) "Glucagon levels are largely determined by the amount of incoming
dietary protein, just as insulin levels are strongly related to the amount of
incoming carbohydrate." (7) Just as insulin lowers high blood sugar,
glucagon raises low blood sugar - especially important when we skip meals,
exercise severely, fast, starvation diet, etc.
Insulin and glucagon also have opposing actions
on two key enzymes which control the fate of fat in the body (stored body fat,
dietary fat, or fat made in the liver/fat cells from carbohydrates under the
stimulus of insulin). "Residing on the surface of the fat cells are two
enzymes - both regulated by insulin and glucagon - responsible for herding fat
into or out of the fat cells. The first, lipoprotein lipase [LPL], transports
fatty acids into the fat cell and keeps them there.... The other,
hormone-sensitive lipase [HSL], does just the opposite - it releases the fat
from fat cells into the blood [where it is then transported to other cells to be
"burned" as fuel].... insulin stimulates the activity of lipoprotein
lipase, the fat-storage enzyme, and glucagon inhibits it; glucagon stimulates
the fat-releasing hormone [HSL], and insulin inhibits it." (3) "The
adipose tissue enzyme [LPL] is highly sensitive to variations in the metabolic
state, being rapidly increased by oral glucose, by high carbohydrate diet and
after usual meals. On the other hand, the LPL activity in adipose tissue
decreases when plasma insulin is low as in diabetes and during caloric
restriction [and on a low carbohydrate diet]." (5)
As the Drs. Eades note in their book Protein
Power: "By altering the ratio of insulin to glucagon - which we can do
through our selection of foods -we can determine which pathway predominates.
Instead of allowing our [fat] biochemistry to control us, we can control it....
In the insulin-dominant mode, fat storage prevails. In the glucagon-dominant
mode..., fat flows away from the fat cells. Fat released from the fat cells
enters the other cells and gets shuttled into the mitochondria, where it is
completely burned for cellular energy. Along with this fat from the fat cells
any dietary fat - whether consumed as fat or converted from carbohydrate or
protein - also flows into the mitochondria for oxidation instead of into the fat
cells to be stored."
The chief dietary stimulant for insulin release
is carbohydrate (CHO); the chief stimulant for glucagon release is protein. The
chief activator of body fat - promoting LPL is insulin; the chief LPL-inhibitor
is glucagon. Without high insulin/LPL activity, dietary fat will not end up as
stored fat. To get a clear sense of the central necessity of insulin to promote
fat storage, consider the fate of the untreated Type I diabetic, whose pancreas
has (more or less) completely ceased secreting insulin. Even on a high carbohydrate
/fat
diet, such a diabetic will continually lose fat (and muscle, as well), and may
even lose 30-40 pounds in a month. Without insulin, even a high fat/high carbohydrate
diet will not cause fat gain, nor will a high fat diet even prevent loss of
existing fat stores. But when dietary fat is combined with large amounts of
dietary carbohydrate which activates both insulin and LPL, then much of both the fat carbohydrate
ends up as stored body fat.
The National Research Council (USA) reported in
1985 that the average American diet was 46% carbohydrate calories, 43% fat
calories, and only 11% protein. (3) Thus it should be obvious that the typical
American diet is also an optimal diet for promoting obesity.
Even though all carbohydrates have some tendency to
stimulate insulin release, some are worse than others. carbohydrate-research expert
Sheldon Reiser has reported that when human volunteers were given drinks or
meals calculated to contain 50 grams of glucose, "... glucose and insulin
responses were 35-65% lower when starch was the carbohydrate source than when
either glucose or sucrose [white sugar] was the carbohydrate source.... The
undesirable effects of sucrose... appears to be due, at least partly, to the
metabolic properties of the fructose moiety. [One sucrose molecule is one
glucose bonded to one fructose].... Fructose infusion in humans and rats has
been shown to produce large decreases in the ATP content of the liver. [The
liver-chief metabolic organ of the body uses 12% of the body's total ATP energy
supply to do its hundreds of metabolic tasks. Anything that seriously lowers
liver ATP is by definition a metabolic poison.].... Neither fructose nor
glucose, when given [alone], stimulates insulin as potently as glucose and
fructose combined. Since diets rarely contain fructose in the absence of glucose
or glucose polymers, small amounts of fructose reaching the general circulation
[after meals] could greatly affect insulin secretion.... Numerous studies have
shown a relationship between insulin levels... and blood triglyceride levels....
Studies in both rats and humans have demonstrated that fructose is more readily
converted into lipogenic [fat-forming] substrate than is glucose....
As might be expected on the basis of its more
lipogenic metabolism, fructose appears to be incorporated into blood
triglycerides more rapidly than is glucose.... In human studies in which the
intake of sucrose has been either eliminated or reduced, significant decreases
in fasting serum triglycerides [normally made under the prodding of insulin]
occurred.... The feeding of sucrose also appears to produce greater increases in
blood triglycerides than does the feeding of glucose or partial starch
hydrolysates." (6)
Thus, natural unrefined starches (especially
vegetables) will tend to cause less hyperinsulin responses than sugar-rich foods
such as candy, cake, pie, doughnuts, soft drinks, sports drinks, etc., as well
as natural sugar foods such as dates, figs, dried pineapple, etc.
INSULIN: ACCELERATOR OF AGING
In his 1999 book The Anti-Aging Zone, Barry Sears
proposes that there are four chief "pillars of aging" that promote
ever-worsening hormonal regulation of and communication between cells,
ultimately leading to aging, disease and death. Sears' four pillars (7) are:
1) Excess insulin
2) Excess cortisol
3) Excess blood glucose
4) Excess free radicals
Many researchers in the past several decades have
uncovered evidence supporting insulin's role as the "chief pillar of
aging." Gerald Reaven is known for his research on "Syndrome X."
This is a syndrome common among sedentary modern Western humans, which involves
the strong clustering of hypertension, insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia,
hypertriglyceridemia, glucose intolerance, obesity, low HDL cholesterol and
heart disease. (1) Reaven has shown that the common denominator of the syndrome
is hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance. As Western peoples age, they tend to
develop the condition of insulin resistance, wherein the target cells of insulin
- especially the muscle cells - become even more resistant to "hearing the
message" of insulin. This in turn lessens the blood sugar-lowering effect
of insulin, so that even-smaller amounts of sugar lead to ever-higher blood
glucose levels - i.e. glucose intolerance. As cells become more resistant to
"hearing" the insulin in an attempt to "bludgeon" the cells
into accepting glucose- i.e. hyperinsulinemia.
Insulin is known to cause sodium retention with
consequent water retention - hence the hypertension (high blood pressure)
connection. As already noted, insulin promotes fat storage in fat cells - i.e.
obesity. Insulin stimulates the liver to convert sugar and dietary fats into
triglycerides - the form of fat that circulates in the blood and is stored in
fat cells - i.e. hypertriglyceridemia. And as R.W. Stout noted in 1985:
"The arterial wall is an insulin-sensitive tissue. Insulin promotes
proliferation of arterial smooth muscle cells [a beginning phase of
atherosclerotic [plaque formation] and enhances lipid synthesis and low-density
lipoprotein [LDL] receptor activity. Insulin also promotes experimental
atherosclerosis in a number of species." (1) Insulin-injecting diabetics
typically develop atherosclerosis 10 - 20 years earlier than
non-insulin-injecting diabetics.
In a 1989 article, "The Deadly
Quartet," M.D. Norman Kaplan reviewed the standard theory that upper-body
obesity typically precedes hypertension, glucose intolerance and high
triglycerides. Kaplan demonstrates that hyperinsulinemia is the more likely root
cause of all four conditions - obesity, glucose intolerance, high triglycerides
and hypertension. (1,3)
Two of the other "pillars of aging" -
excess cortisol and excess blood glucose - are also intimately tied to excess
insulin. As Heleniak and Aston report, "A consequence of obesity is the
development of insulin resistance as weight is gained.... Insulin resistance has
been induced in normal human subjects by overfeeding. The onset of glucose
intolerance may be due to frequent snacking on high energy density foods which
prevent insulin levels from returning to normal fasting levels keeping insulin
circulating in the blood for a better part of the 24-hour day." (4) If
levels edge chronically higher, cells must become somewhat insulin resistant.
Why?
Because most cells can burn either fat or glucose
for fuel, but the brain (under non-fasting conditions) can only burn glucose and
typically needs 400 - 500 calories/day of glucose - i.e. about one half the
normal total circulating blood sugar. The brain doesn't need insulin to absorb
glucose, giving it a competitive edge over the other 100 - 200 pounds of tissue
- unless insulin levels are frequently high.
Thus in order to safeguard the brain's
minute-by-minute blood glucose delivery, other cells must develop insulin
resistance when insulin levels are frequently or chronically high, so that they
don't "snatch" all the blood glucose from the hungry brain. The
primary hormone that should raise blood sugar to adequately feed the brain is
glucagon. But "insulin can act as a glucagon release-inhibiting paracrine
hormone," (2) especially at high concentrations. So then the body goes to
"Plan B": the release of cortisol.
THE INSULIN-CORTISOL CONNECTION
Cortisol comes to the brain's rescue in two ways.
(8) It increases gluconeogenesis - the making of glucose by breaking down
proteins from skin, muscle and organ tissue and converting them to glucose in
the liver. "Cortisol also causes a moderate decrease in the rate of glucose
utilization by cells everywhere in the body" (8) - i.e. cortisol causes
insulin resistance!
Thus Sears' first three pillars of aging - excess
insulin, cortisol and blood glucose - are all interlocking and mutually
enhancing. And not only does cortisol cannibalize precious body protein to make
blood sugar, it also weakens the immune system and damages hippocampal neurons -
the very one's lost in Alzheimer's disease. (7)
Cortisol also contributes mightily to obesity.
"Adrenal corticosteroids also play a role in the development of
hypothalamic obesity, gold thioglucose obesity, and dietary obesity. Thus, the
substrate for essentially all forms of obesity rests on a foundation of
glucocorticoid [i.e. cortisol] secretion from the adrenal gland" (4).
Cortisol will also be secreted to raise blood
sugar in those who frequently skip meals, are fasting, practice "starvation
dieting", or are under severe stress.
INSULIN, cAMP, & EFFECTIVE HORMONAL
COMMUNICATION
Most hormones deliver their "message"
by interacting with specific receptors on outer cell membrane surfaces, although
some do penetrate directly into the cell as well. When hormones bind to their
appropriate cellular receptors, they normally activate substances inside the
cell known as "second messengers" (the hormone [Ed.- hormone is Latin
meaning chemical-messenger] is the first "messenger"). These second
messengers actually induce the hormonal biological effect inside the cell.
Insulin acts through the second messengers inositol triphosphate (IP3) and
diacylglycerol (DAG).
Perhaps the commonest second messenger, however,
is cyclic AMP (cAMP). "Many hormones do appear to utilize cAMP as a second
messenger, including calcitonin, chorionic gonadotrophin, corticotrophin,
epinephrine [adrenalin], follicle-stimulating hormone [FSH], glucagon,
luteinizing hormone [LH], lipotrophin, melanocyte-stimulating hormone [MSH],
norepinephrine [noradrenaline], parathyroid hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone
[TSH], and vasopressin." (9)
Thus, not only are insulin and glucagon opposite
in their basic physiologic actions, they were opposing second messengers: IP3/DAG
vs. cAMP. Sears points out that "...if a cell has multiple hormone
receptors, then the final biological response of the cell depends on which
second messenger system (cAMP or IP3/DAG) predominates at that point in
time." (7) When hormones such as noradrenaline or glucagon bind to their
cell membrane receptors, they activate an enzyme called "adenylate cyclase."
This enzyme then produces the cAMP second messenger inside the cell.
Unfortunately insulin opposes cyclic AMP
production by adenylate cyclase. (9) Now you can begin to see why Sears
considers excessive insulin as the basic pillar of aging. Insulin is one of the
few hormones (cortisol being the other major one) which increases with age -
most others, such as thyroid, DHEA, testosterone, estrogen, growth hormone, etc.
decrease with age.
Now look again at the long list of hormones (and
not all of them are listed) which use cAMP as their second messenger, most of
which hormones suffer decreased secretion with aging. Since insulin generally
increases with age, but opposes cAMP, while most hormones that act through cAMP
decrease with age, it is obvious that hyperinsulinemia will tend to distort the
overall "symphonic orchestra" of hormone interactions, and thus
promote "low fidelity" hormonal communication.
Thus hyperinsulinemia will tend to damage our
entire metabolism, because the sum total of the myriad biochemical reactions in
our trillions of cells is under the control of our (ideally) tightly
synchronized and integrated hormonal "symphonic orchestra." Imagine
the sound of a symphony played by an orchestra where one instrument (e.g. the
trumpet) is highly amplified while the other instruments are being muted in
their sound volume, and you have a crude metaphor for the metabolic
dysregulation induced by excessive carbohydrate-consumption - caused hyperinsulinemia.
INSULIN, EICOSANOIDS & cAMP
Eicosanoids are a biologically powerful group of
quasi-hormones (technically called "autocrine hormones") derived from
a unique group of polyunsaturated fatty acids containing 20 carbon atoms.
Prostaglandins, thromboxanes, leukotrienes, lipoxins and hydroxylated fatty
acids are just some of the subclasses of eicosanoids. Autocrine eicosanoids,
unlike endocrine hormones, are not secreted by glands, nor do they travel
through the bloodstream to reach distant target tissues. Rather they are
continuously being produced, in minute quantities, at the local cellular level,
"living" and "dying" in seconds.
Eicosanoids are powerful local "biological
response modifiers," or feedback modulators, helping to
coordinate/fine-tune cellular reactions. Prostaglandins (PG) of the one-series,
derived from the fatty acid gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), are generally considered
"good PGs," while PGs of the two-series (PG2) are considered "bad
PGs" - at least when present beyond some bare minimum necessary levels.
PG2s are derived from the fatty acid arachidonic acid (AA), which in turn can
either be made from GLA or gotten preformed from the diet. (See charts 1 &
2.)
A key property of PGs is their ability to
modulate intracellular cAMP levels. "The PGs of the E series are those most
implicated in adipose tissue regulation.... PGE1 stimulates adenylate cyclase.
The resulting increase in cAMP production ultimately leads to accelerated
lipolysis.... PGE2 has an inhibitory effect on adenylate cyclase resulting in a
decrease of intracellular cAMP." (4) "...cyclic AMP is the same second
messenger used by a great number of endocrine hormones to translate their
biological information to the appropriate target cell. By maintaining adequate
cellular levels of [PGE1], you are guaranteed that a certain baseline level of
cyclic AMP is always present in a cell. When an additional burst of cyclic AMP
is generated by the endocrine hormone interacting with its receptor, it's now
far more likely that the overall cyclic AMP levels in the cell will be high
enough to ensure that the appropriate biological response (i.e. better hormonal
communication) is produced.... In some ways, the levels of cyclic AMP generated
by "good eicosanoids" are like a booster signal to ensure that fewer [cAMP-using]
endocrine hormones are necessary to deliver [their] appropriate biological
message.... Thus, even with decreasing levels of endocrine hormones, hormonal
communication can be maintained...."(7)
Not only does PGE1 boost hyperinsulinemia-suppressed
cAMP levels, it also helps control insulin itself. "PGE1 has been found to
play a role in insulin secretion and glucose tolerance. The [pancreatic]
beta-cell regulation of insulin release is influenced by PGE1. PGE1 inhibits
insulin secretion, perhaps by normalizing insulin receptor sensitivity. Low
levels of PGE1 have been found in diabetics." (4)
Considering the pivotal importance of PGE1 and
PGE2 for controlling insulin levels, cAMP levels, and for modulating the effect
of the age-decreasing levels of most cAMP-using hormones, how then can we gain
greater control over our PGE1/PGE2 levels? We can exert dietary/nutrient
influence over PGE1/PGE2 at three key points in their production pathways. The
first control point involves increasing the effectiveness of the conversion of
cis-linoleic acid (a fatty acid common to many vegetable oils) into GLA. The
second control point rests upon influencing the fate of the GLA metabolite
dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid (DGLA). DGLA can end up either as "good"
PGE1 or "bad" PGE2, depending on whether or not the conversion of DGLA
to AA is successfully blocked. The third control point comes from restricting
the dietary intake of preformed AA.
Cis-linoleic acid (CLA) is the chief
polyunsaturated fatty acid found in most vegetable oils, such as sunflower,
safflower, corn, soy and sesame oils. Yet its only two known functions in the
human body are to be burned for fuel (like any fatty acid), or to serve as the
substrate to produce GLA. The conversion of CLA to GLA is catalyzed/controlled
by the activity of the enzyme delta-6-desaturase (D6D). According to the world's
premier GLA researcher, Dr. David Horrobin, the activity of D6D can be blocked
by a host of factors (10):
1) Trans-fatty acids (common in hydrogenated
oils, margarine's and shortenings)
2) High saturated fat intake
3) Cholesterol
4) Deficiencies of zinc, pyridoxine (vitamin B6), or magnesium
5) Diabetes - i.e. severe insulin deficiency
6) Excessive alcohol intake
7) Aging
8) Oncogenic viruses
9) Chemical carcinogens
10) Ionizing radiation.
Thus avoiding hydrogenated oil/margarine-based
"food" products; eating only low-fat meat, poultry and dairy products;
minimizing alcohol intake; avoiding chemical additive-containing
processed/manufactured (i.e. junk) foods; and taking supplements of zinc
(15mg/day), vitamin B6 (10-50mg/day) and magnesium (200-500mg/day), will tend to
maximize D6D activity, at least somewhat increasing conversion of CLA to GLA.
Vitamin B6 may also aid the conversion of GLA to DGLA for conversion to cAMP-enhancing
PGE1. (10)
Vitamin C and niacin (vitamin B3) are needed to convert DGLA to PGE1 (10); so supplements of C (300-500mg/day, minimum) and B3 (50-100mg/day) may
also aid PGE1 formation.
For those who don't wish to trust their PGE1
manufacture to "temperamental" D6D, supplements of preformed GLA from
evening primrose oil, borage oil, or blackcurrant oil may be helpful. Barry
Sears claims that over time GLA supplements may become counter-productive,
gradually increasing AA and anti-cAMP PGE2 more than PGE1. (7)
Sears doesn't
mention the need for C and B3 to aid DGLA to PGE1 conversion - this may have
affected his clinical results. My own decades-long clinical experience has not
generally shown GLA supplements to be problematic, and there is a vast human
clinical literature of successful use of GLA in many areas of disease, including
showing significant results in treating obesity. (11)
DGLA can be converted to AA by the enzyme
delta-5-desaturase - normally a reaction better suppressed than permitted. This
is the critical control point in nutritional attempts to enhance PGE1 and reduce
PGE2. And it turns out that the primary activator of D5D is - insulin! (3,7) The
primary hormonal suppressor of D5D is glucagon, (3,7) while the fish-oil fatty
acid EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) is also a significant inhibitor of D5D. (3,7)
(I take 2-3 capsules twice daily of the sardine oil-derived Kyolic-EPA as
part of my own personal anti-D5D regimen.)
Each Kyolic-EPA cap provides 280mg EPA (also
120mg DHA and garlic extract, along with 10mg unesterified vitamin E to prevent
rancidity).
The third control point in lowering excessive
levels of PGE2 production involves eliminating as much red meat fat as possible
from our diets. Feed-lot beef, pork, etc. is rich in AA; low-fat range-fed beef,
poultry, etc. is low in AA, and contains some EPA.
GROWTH HORMONE, TESTOSTERONE, ESTROGEN: THE
INSULIN CONNECTION
Growth hormone (GH) and insulin have both
complementary and antagonistic properties. GH and insulin are both anabolic -
they facilitate the growth of lean body mass - i.e. muscle, organ tissue,
tendons, bones, etc. When animals are surgically deprived of both hormones,
growth ceases. Giving either GH or insulin alone causes virtually no increase in
growth, but giving them both together restores normal growth. (8)
In other ways, these hormones are opposites: GH
promotes fat burning/loss, while insulin opposes fat burning and promotes fat
gain. "Increased insulin levels and decreased GH levels are characteristic
of obesity." (4)
PGE1 suppresses insulin release while PGE1 increases
pituitary GH release. (4) Aging pituitaries may still produce adequate GH - it's
the releasing of GH that seems to become problematic with age. Perhaps not
surprisingly, GH-releasing hormone requires adequate pituitary cAMP levels to
perform its GH-releasing "magic." (7) Also, a factor that can decrease
pituitary GH-production is elevated insulin, which may inhibit GH synthesis. (7)
Thus lowering insulin through a low-carbohydrate diet combined with GLA/EPA supplements
to enhance PGE1/cAMP levels is a natural way to restore age-declining GH
function.
While GH can stimulate fat-burning by itself, it
helps to build muscle mass when combined with its normal synergist -
testosterone. (7)
In both men and women, testosterone is produced through the
combined action of pituitary-released follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and
luteinizing hormone (LH), acting on the ovaries in women and leydig cells of the
testes in men.
Yet both FSH and LH act through the second
messenger cAMP. (9) Thus obesity/high carbohydrate diet-elevated insulin will tend to
inhibit the testosterone-producing activity of FSH/LH.
The problem doesn't end there, however. In both
men and women, testosterone may be converted to estrogen through an aromatase
enzyme. And the aromatase enzyme exists and functions primarily in body fat!
Furthermore, estrogen is itself a powerful pro-fat hormone: "In addition to
deposition of fat in the breasts and subcutaneous tissues, estrogens cause the
deposition of fat in the buttocks and thighs...." (8) Indeed, insulin,
estrogen and cortisol are the three primary pro-fat hormones of the human body.
Another threat to normal male testosterone levels
is severe, chronic stress. Both testosterone and cortisol are made from the
precursor protohormone pregnenolone. Normal daily male testosterone production
is 5mg, while 10-20mg of cortisol is produced daily under non-stressed life
conditions. (7)
The amount of cortisol produced under stress may double, perhaps
"stealing" scarce pregnenolone needed for (decreasing with age)
testosterone production. As noted earlier, cortisol is extremely pro-fat, and is
the chief agent of muscle catabolism (breakdown), directly opposing
testosterone's anabolic muscle-building action.
THE INSULIN - EXERCISE CONNECTION
The late twentieth century Western world has
achieved the most sedentary lifestyle for the mass of humanity in all human
history. Our sedentary modern world also provides a glutton's feast of cheap
sugar-and starch-rich breads, chips, pastas, cakes, cookies, candy, etc. so
abundantly available that even those on welfare can afford to feast on these
hyperinsulinemia-promoting carbo-riches. It is perhaps no coincidence that in
order to rapidly (and cheaply) fatten cattle and hogs before slaughter, they are
confined in crowded feed-lots where the animals have virtually no room to move,
while being fed all the carbohydrate-rich grain they can eat.
Modern obese humans routinely suffer from the
unique twentieth century "disease" - hypokinesis - i.e. too little
bodily movement. The late twentieth century Western epidemic of obesity is as
much due to widespread chronic hypokinesis, as it is to the carbohydrate
/caloric excess
typical of modern humans. Thus Thompson and colleagues note: "Body fat is
significantly affected by a program of prescribed exercise in both sexes at all
age levels.... Exercise has been shown to produce body fat loss without caloric
restriction in both animals... and humans..., although the loss is usually more
pronounced with caloric restriction.
In fact, reductions in activity level are
strongly correlated with body fat increases, even if caloric intake is
significantly reduced.... In addition, exercise decreases storage fat rather
than LBM [lean body mass], whereas dietary interventions [i.e. dieting[ tend to
reduce both [body fat and LBM]." (12)
Studies done in the 1970's with both men and
women found that significant body fat loss could be produced simply through a
regular (i.e. at least four days/week) long-term walking program, without any
dieting. (13,14) "Vigorous regular walking has resulted in reduced body fat
stores, reduced... insulin requirements (a 36% decrease in the ratio of
insulin/glucose concentration occurred), and [spontaneously] reduced food
intake." (4) A key feature of the essentiality of moderate aerobic
exercise, i.e. walking (the primary "natural" form of
"exercise" engaged in of necessity by virtually all of humanity prior
to the twentieth century) to preventing/reducing obesity is that "exercise
increases insulin sensitivity and decreases insulin resistance)...." (15)
The reason for this is quite simple. Actively
exercising muscles may take in up to 30 times more blood sugar than they do when
at rest, and this cellular uptake of glucose occurs without insulin! (7,8) Thus
walking provides the body with an alternative method to remove excess glucose
from the bloodstream without the usual need for insulin secretion. Taking a
brisk long walk 30-60 minutes after a large meal may help blunt the otherwise
inevitable massive insulin surge large (carbohydrate-rich) meals normally induce.
THE ANTI-INSULIN PROGRAM
1) Seriously reduce (better yet, eliminate) from
the diet all processed, refined, junk food, high sugar (sucrose, fructose,
glucose), high white flour "foods": bread, pasts, cake, pie, candy,
ice cream, crackers, cereal, corn/potato chips, snack bars, waffles/pancakes,
soft drinks, doughnuts, sweet syrups, ad infinitum.
2) Minimize intake of salt, especially salty carbohydrate-foods:
pretzels, chips, crackers, etc. "Salt increases plasma glucose and insulin
response to starchy foods." (4)
3) Increase glucagon - stimulating with lean
protein: low-fat (ideally range-fed, organic) beef, lamb, chicken. turkey, fish
etc.
4) Reduce carbohydrate-intake from the typical
American/British levels of 250-400 grams/day to 75-150 grams/day. These
carbohydrates should be mainly vegetables, with small amounts of brown rice,
millet, beans, almonds, pumpkin seeds and other unrefined, high-fibre natural
foods.
5) Take 40-60 minute brisk walks, 4-6 days/week.
Avoid walking in highly polluted areas and/or times of day, as toxins from auto
exhaust may inhibit mitochondrial burning of fuel (i.e. fat) for energy.
6) Take various supplements discussed in this
article - e.g. C, B6, B3, Zinc, Magnesium, GLA, EPA, etc.
ADDITIONAL NUTRITIONAL/PHARMACOLOGIC AIDS TO FAT
LOSS/INSULIN REDUCTION
1) Chromium Picolinate
This form of chromium is well absorbed, and has
been shown in various animal and human studies to aid in fat loss while at least
modestly enhancing lean body mass. (16) "The ability of chromium picolinate
to enhance insulin responsiveness has been demonstrated in rat myoblast cell
cultures. 72-h pre-incubation with chromium picolinate (50ng Cr/ml) resulted in
a 60% increase in insulin binding, and markedly enhanced glucose and leucine
uptake...." (16) Dosage: 200mcg Chromium (as picolinate) two or three times
daily for women; 200mcg three times daily or 400mcg twice daily for men.
2) Obesity, aging, chronic dieting, genetics,
lack of exercise and lack of cold exposure may all lead to "subclinical"
hypothyroidism, often involving deficient conversion of less active T4 to T3. T3
decreases the activity of D5D, reducing pro-insulin PGE2, just as do glucagon
and EPA. (7) T3 also stimulates fat burning. (4) Ideally one should use T3 (Cytomel)
only under a physician's care and guidance, but those who fit the low-thyroid
profile and suffer from chronic obesity and fatigue, and who are willing to take
practical, moral and legal responsibility for their own actions, may wish to
experiment with modest doses of T3 - i.e., 2-3 mcg once or twice daily, taken
morning and/or early afternoon. T3 is fast/short-acting, and most effects will
be gone within 24 hours or less. Nonetheless, there is some risk here - caveat
emptor! Heart palpitations, excessive sweating, racing thoughts, headaches,
irritability, and insomnia are all hints - it's not for you! Those with known or
suspected (past or present) hyperthyroidism, even if obese, should not use T3
without a doctor's care. Similarly those with any other serious disease states -
especially heart arrhythmia's/heart disease - should be extremely cautious in T3
use.
3) Anti-cortisol states
Since cortisol levels tend to increase with age
(and stress), and since cortisol promotes both obesity and insulin resistance,
this is a key strategy to normalize weight/insulin levels. DHEA, (7) and high
dose vitamin C (17) may all help lower elevated cortisol levels. DHEA: 10-50mg
A.M. Gerovital-H3: 100mg A.M. Dilantin (Phenytoin) 25-50mg at bedtime. Vitamin
C: 500-1000mg 3-4 times daily.
4) L-Tryptophan/ 5-Hydroxytryptophan
Several human studies with 5HTP, the precursor of
serotonin, have found good weight loss results with 5HTP. (18,19) There is
evidence that some humans compulsively snack on carbohydrate foods to feel better. The
large insulin releases generated by such "carbo-bingeing"
preferentially increase tryptophan/serotonin in the brain, temporarily reducing
anxiety and depression in such people. (20) By providing an alternative,
non-insulin-driven way to increase brain serotonin, L-Tryptophan, supplements
may help reduce weight not only by reducing total caloric intake, but especially
by reducing carbohydrate intake, thus lessening hyper-insulinemia/insulin resistance. In
the 1992 Italian study (19), 300mg/5HTP supplements may help reduce weight not
only by reducing total caloric intake, but especially by reducing carbohydrate intake,
thus lessening hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. In the 1992 Italian study,
(19) 300mg 5HTP 3 times daily before meals reduced women's caloric intake over a
twelve week period from 3232 cal/day to 1273 cal/day, while reducing carbohydrate
intake
from 350gm/day to 150gm/day. Weight dropped an average of eleven pounds. (The
study did use special enteric-coated 5HTP capsules to prevent gut irritation) Ed
[IAS provides same Italian 5HTP]. Taking 1000-1500mg L-Tryptophan at bedtime, or
50-100mg 5HTP before meals may reduce carbohydrate-craving and intake.
5) Pro-Growth Hormone supplements.
As noted earlier, PGE1 may enhance GH release. so
all the PGE1-enhancing nutrients (GLA, EPA, B3, B6, C, zinc, magnesium) may be
helpful here. Hydergine has been shown to increase GH-release in the elderly
with long-term usage at 1.5mg every 6 hours. (21) The authors of this study also
note that bromocryptine (Parlodel) may also enhance adult GH-release. They also
note that the enhanced pituitary GH-release from hydergine seems to be related
to an increase in brain (hypothalamic) dopamine status, which normally declines
(often precipitously) with age. Thus the dopamine-enhancing agent Deprenyl may
also be useful as part of a GH-restoration program. [Ed. Pearson & Shaw also
noted this affect with Sinemet in their book Life Extension.]
6) Mitochondrial energizers and
protectants
In a healthy human, storage fat is at a minimum
and sooner or later all fat-dietary, body-manufactured, and storage fat - ends
up as "fuel for the furnace" - i.e. the trillions of mitochondrial
"power plants " found in most of our cells. Vitamins B1, B2, B3, B5 (pantothenic
acid), and biotin, as well as NADH, alpha-lipoic acid, CoQ10/Idebenone,
magnesium and manganese are all necessary "spark plugs" to facilitate
burning fat and sugar for energy. 10-100mg B1, B2, B3, 50-200mg B5, 1-10mg
biotin, 5-20mg NADH, 50-300mg alpha-lipoic acid, 60-300mg CoQ10 and/or 45-135mg
Idebenone, 200-500mg magnesium, and 3-10mg managanese may optimize mitochondrial
energy cycles. Since the mitochondrial structures inevitably generate massive
amounts of free radicals in turning fuel into energy, and since these structures
are rich in easily rancidified polyunsaturated fatty acids, a panoply of
antioxidants - e.g. 100-400 IU vitamin E, 500-2000mg vitamin C, 100-200mcg
selenium, 50-300mg alpha-lipoic acid, 500-1000mg N-acetylcysteine, 2mg copper as
copper sebacate (SOD-mimetic), 50-100mg grape seed extract/pycnogenol, 300-500mg
silymarin - may help protect the essential "fat burning furnaces." In
addition, 1gm L-carnitine twice daily on an empty stomach may facilitate fat
burning - carnitine is the "shuttle molecule" that "escorts"
fatty acids into mitochondria where they are then oxidized. (22) ALC (acetyl-L-carnitine)
may also be a useful mitochondrial regenerator - mitochondria become
progressively deformed and dysfunctional with aging. Dosage: 1-3gms/day. Ward
Dean suggests this dose can be half L-carnitine and half ALC to achieve
successful mitochondrial regeneration. (23)
7) Caffeine
Caffeine, whether from coffee or as a
"drug", has many benefits for aiding fat loss. However, excessive
doses (probably 300mg/day and up, on average) may pose risks of "caffeinism",
with such symptoms as headaches, restlessness, irritability, insomnia, anxiety,
excessive urination, gut irritation, heart palpitations, and muscle tremors. (15)
A thermogenic/fat burning dose is probably 100-200mg daily - i.e. the
equivalent of one to two cups of coffee/day, or two to four cups made with half
decaf and half regular. Caffeine taken with a meal may induce increased
thermogenesis - burning fat to make heat. (15)
It may increase resting metabolic
rate - our resting metabolism burns 60-70% of our total daily energy
consumption. (15)
Caffeine preadministration 45-60 minutes before exercise has
been shown to spare liver/muscle glycogen and to enhance fatty acid burning in
humans. (24)
Caffeine taken after at least an eight hour fast, i.e. in the
morning after arising, may be especially effective when combined with a 40-60
minute brisk walk, to enhance burning of stored body fat. (24)
NOTE
This review of anti-aging weight loss has of
course only scratched the surface of this amazingly complex and multi-pronged
issue. Nonetheless, it is my deeply-held belief, derived from clinical and
personal experience combined with a 30 year continuous reading of the
medical/scientific literature, that the combination of hypokinesis, excessive carbohydrate
consumption (especially of the sugar and white flour junk food variety),
hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance, excessive PGE2/inadequate PGE1 and hypo-cAMP
status, is the core of the modern epidemic of refractory, chronic obesity. The
interested reader is strongly urged to read references 1, 3, 7, and 15 for a
much more detailed coverage of these and other related issues.
REFERENCES
1) R. ATKINS: DR. ATKINS' NEW DIET REVOLUTION.
NYC: M. EVANS & CO., 1999.
2) J. HARDMAN, ET AL (EDS): GOODMAN &
GILMAN'S THE PHARMALOGICAL BASIS OF THERAPEUTICS. NYC: McGRAW-HILL, 1996.
3) M.R. EADES & M.D.EADES: PROTEIN POWER.
NYC: BANTAM, 1999.
4) E. HELENIAK & B. ASTON: "PROSTAGLANDINS,
BROWN FAT AND WEIGHT LOSS." MED HYPOTH 1989, 28:13-33.
5) M.-R. TASKINEN & E. NIKKILA:
"LIPOPROTEIN LIPASE OF ADIPOSE TISSUE & SKELETAL MUSCLE IN HUMAN
OBESITY" METABOLISM 1981, 30:810-17.
6) S. REISER: "PHYSIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES
BETWEEN STARCHES AND SUGARS" IN MEDICAL APPLICATIONS OF CLINICAL
NUTRITION, J. BLAND, ED. NEW CANAAN: KEATS, 1983. PP. 133-177.
7) B. SEARS: THE ANTI-AGING ZONE. NYC:
REGAN/HARPER COLLINS, 1999.
8) A. GUYTON: TEXTBOOK OF MEDICAL PHYSIOLOGY.
PHILADELPHIA: W.B. SAUNDERS, 1981.
9) R. PIKE & M. BROWN: NUTRITION - AN
INTEGRATED APPROACH. NYC: MACMILLAN, 1984.
10) D. HORROBIN: "THE IMPORTANCE OF GAMMA-LINOLENIC
ACID AND PROSTAGLANDIN E1 IN HUMAN NUTRITION AND MEDICINE" J HOL MED
1981, 3:118-139.
11) M. WERBACH: NUTRITIONAL INFLUENCES ON
ILLNESS. TARZANA: THIRD LINE PRESS, 1996. PP.459-63.
12) J. THOMPSON ET AL: "EXERCISE AND
OBESITY:ETIOLOGY, PHYSIOLOGY, AND INTERVENTION" PSYCH BULL 1982, 91:
55-79.
13) G. GWINUP: "EFFECT OF EXERCISE ALONE ON
THE WEIGHT OF OBESE WOMEN" ARCH INT MED 1975, 135: 676-80.
14) A. LEON ET AL: "EFFECTS OF A VIGOROUS
WALKING PROGRAM ON BODY COMPOSITION, AND...METABOLISM OF OBESE YOUNG
MEN." J CLIN NUTR 1979, 32:1776-87.
15) D. MOWREY: FAT MANAGEMENT - THE THERMOGENIC
FACTOR. LEHI, UT: VICTORY PUB., 1994.
16) M. McCARTY: "HOMOLOGOUS PHYSIOLOGICAL
EFFECTS OF PHENFORMIN AND CHROMIUM PICOLINATE" MED HYPOTH 1993, 41:
316-24.
17) J. SOUTH: GH3, THE ORIGINAL ANTI-AGING DRUG
AND STILL ONE OF THE BEST!" IAS BULLETIN, 3 (2):1997.
18) F. CECI & C. CANGIANO ET AL: "THE
EFFECTS OF ORAL 5-HYDROXYTRYPTOPHAN ADMINISTRATION ON FEEDING BEHAVIOR IN
OBESE ADULT FEMALE SUBJECTS" J NEURAL TRANSM 1989, 76: 109-17.
19) C. CANGIANO & F. CECI ET AL: EATING
BEHAVIOR AND ADHERENCE TO DIETARY PRESCRIPTIONS IN OBESE ADULT SUBJECTS
TREATED WITH 5-HYDROXYTRYPTOPHAN" AM J CLIN NUTR 1992, 56: 863-67.
20) J. WURTMAN: "CARBOHYDRATE CRAVING, MOOD
CHANGES AND OBESITY" J CLIN PSYCHIAT (SUPPLEMENT), 1988, 49: 37-9.
21) E. ROLANDI ET AL: "CHANGES OF PITUITARY
SECRETION AFTER LONG-TERM TREATMENT WITH HYDERGINE, IN ELDERLY PATIENTS"
ACTA ENDOCRIN 1983, 102: 332-36.
22) M. McCARTY: "PROMOTION OF HEPATIC LIPID
OXIDATION AND GLUCONEOGENESIS AS A STRATEGY FOR APPETITE CONTROL" MED
HYPOTH 1994, 42: 215-25.
23) W. DEAN: "ACETYL-L-CARNITINE - THE
REJUVENATING EFFECTS" IAS BULLETIN 3 (4):1998.
24) M. McCARTY: "OPTIMIZING EXERCISE FOR
WEIGHT LOSS" MED HYPOTH 1995, 44: 325-30.
DISCLAIMER; ALL INFORMATION IS EDUCATIONAL AND SHOULD NOT REPLACE THE ADVICE OF YOUR PHYSICIAN.
The above article is copyrighted and may not be
copied without the written permission of International Antiaging Systems, Les
Autelets Suite A, Sark GY9 0SF, Channel Islands, UK.
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